New -Concept In Constitution

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1 A DORSTYs ROBBNS WN HE STONY BROOK # SOUNDNGS LT. CONTEST Ad L one Eutors t ot go J A c bounangs are pleased to announce the wnners' of tfe frst Annual Lterary Contest. George Dorsty, '69, was the recpent of the $25 Poetry Award for hs "Wsh You Well". Another of hs poems, "To a Dyng Solder", wrtten n Germany three years ago whle he was servng wth Ar Force Securty Servces, was gven specal rec ognton. Mr. Dorsty plans a teachng career n Englsh on the hgh school level. We should also lke to make specal menton of two other poets Karel Rpel, '70, for "ncdent at Durham Dner" and Kenneth Terry, '69, for an unttled poem. The wnner of the $25 Prose Award was Leonard Robbns for an unttled short story. A Sophomore majorng n Englsh hs major outsde nterest s musc. He s both a cellst and panst, and he has expermented n composton. n the prose category, specal recognton goes to Rochelle Nemroff, '69, for her short story, "The Safar". Response to the contest was Englsh Semnar The State Unversty at Stony Brook wll conduct ts thrd consecutve sxweek summer nfov advanced study for hers of Englsh (grades 712) begnnng June 26. Sponsored by the U.S. Offce of Educaton under Ttle X of the Natonal Defense Educaton Act (NDEA), the nsttute wll be lmted to 27 teachers from New York State. Agan, as n the 1965 and 1966 nsttutes, the partcpants wll deal wth the problems of nterpretng lterary works by nferental analyss and wth the problems of argumentatve wrtng encountered n the composton of ther own papers. These actvtes wll be combned ths year n one course. A semnar on the ntegraton of lterature and composton n a demonstraton class of hgh school students wll put the same problems n the context of the teacher's responsblty. The staff wll comprse Dr. Thomas Rogers, Dr. Homer Goldberg and Wllam Walsh of the Englsh Department; Dr. El Sefman of the Department of Educaton; and George Rystar of the Far Rockway Hgh School. All but Dr. Sefman have taught n prevous NDEA nsttutes at Stony Brook. Partcpants n the nsttute wll be elgble for a weekly stpend of $75 and a weekly allowance of $15 for each dependent. Housng accommodatons wll be avalable on the campus, but resdence s not requred. nformaton and applcaton forms may be obtaned by wrtng to Professor Thomas Rogers, Drector, NDEA nsttute of Englsh, State Unversty of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, N.Y , or by callng (516) Applcatons must be postmarked not later than March 20. George Dorstv, the wnner of the poetry award from SOUNDNGS. exceptonal; there were a total of 182 poetry entres and 16 prose entres. Much of the materal here mentoned for recognton S beng consdered for publcaton n the May ssue of Soundngs. Contestants wll soon be notfed of such decsons. n any case, the frst contest was hghly successful, and the edtors extend ther most sncere thanks to all partcpants for ther nterest and response. Contrbutons are stll beng accepted for the May ssue. The readlne for materal s March 15. The Edtors wclass of '7 by Sharoe * r,,^. ^ W Cooke Amng at a total enrollment of 1500, the admssons offce wll send out the frst of approxmately 3200 notces of acceptance to prospectve freshmen ths week. Edward J. Malloy, Drector of Admssons, dsclosed that the top rankng 1000 applcants wll receve ther notces frst. Although the overall percentage of those who wll turn out n the fall s approxmately 50 percent, the frst group of acceptances wll fall lower. These are the top rankng fracton, who often are recpents of outofstate scholarshps. Stony Brook s not ther frst choce. Snce constructon of the new dorms s ether on or ahead of schedule, the admnstraton foresees no problems n housng the new freshmen. Mr. Malloy sad that the admssons offce s rarely wrong about the percentage of applcants t expects to actually attend the Unversty, although the percentage s dfferent n every school. The number of applcants who are accepted and actually attend Harvard, for example, s usually about go percent. Last year, the Stony Brook freshman class numbered 1140, whch represented 40 percent of the students accepted. Mr. Malloy sad that the major reason for ths low rate was the acceptance letter maled to the ncomng freshmen warnng them that they mght have to be trpled. S STATE5MA M VOL. 10 NO. 14 STUDENT PUBLCATON OF STATE UNV. OF N. Y. AT STONY BROOK WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 New Concept n Consttuton By Steve Plnck A spokesman for the present Consttuton Commttee announced last Sunday that t has fnally agreed on a sutable concept for anew Polty Consttuton. Bascally the new structure wll consst of an Executve Commttee, and three commssons dealng wth resdents, commuters, and student actvtes. The Executve Commttee wll consst of: an Executve Board made up of the Presdent of Polty, Executve Vce Presdent, Executve Secretary, and Polty Treasurer; three Polty Vce Presdents who wll each head a commsson; and four class Presdents. The Commsson of Resdent Affars and the Commsson of Commuter Affars wll be structured by the resdent and commuter students respectvely. Ths undefned structure wll allow for an everncreasng student body, a consderaton whch was the major fault of the present consttuton. The Polty Vce Presdent and Assstant Polty Treasurer, who wll be part of each body, wll be elected by the group whch they represent. These legslatve bodes wll deal wth stuatons unque to ther consttuents. '1 Notfe mssons offce polcy descrbed by Mr. Malloy as "get the best." Ths polcy s decded by Presdent Toll and the Faculty Commttee on Admssons headed by James A. Fowler and ncludng Edward Bonvalot, Danel Dcker, John Pratt, Martn Travs and Robert Kerber. The average standard for acceptance s an 85 average of hgh school' grades and a score of 215 on the Regents Scholarshp Test. The Admssons Offce tres, however, to mantan the "human element". Applcants are often gven extra consderaton on the bass of such exceptons as llness or famly death. Thus those who may possess the potental, although unproved, are gven a chance.. The Admssons staff, whch now conssts of seven professonals, wth hopes for two more, and a clercal staff of thrteen, bases ts acceptances on hgh school records, extracurrcular actvtes and on gudance counselor records. Stony Brook s one of the few schools whch provdes a supplementary questonnare to shed lght on the specal motvatons a student mght have. An especally strong area may counteract a weak one. ntervews, more for the beneft of student nformaton than to the Board, serve to orent the student to the school and hs chances of admttance. f hs chances are slm, he may be advsed on where he may apply. Mr. Malloy added that applcatons for the fall semester wll be accepted as late as May 23. m M ~ ~ The Commsson of Student Actvtes, n addton to a Polty Vce Presdent and Assstant Polty Treasurer, wll have four elected class delegates and four delegatesatlarge. t wll be responsble for the recognton of student clubs and organzatons and the legslaton of these, n addton to assumng the responsbltes of the present Student Actvtes Board. The Executve Commttee wll then be left to handle such Unverstywde questons as currculum and leadershp conferences. The Executve Board wll have a veto power over Commsson legslaton, whch could be overrdden by a threefourths map)ty of ethe partcularm com_ msson. The preseyt Consttuton Commttee, whch s termnatng the By Stan Ostrow The frst annual March weekend, sponsored by the Student Actvtes Board wth Maxne Roth as charman of the event, wll help brng n the sprng at Stony Brook wth a group of exctng, and funpacked actvtes for the Stony Brook student. On Frday nght, March 17, the lonlamb dance wll start the March weekend. t wll take place n JN and JS dorms wth loud and soft musc sgnfyng lon and lamb and wnter and sprng. At the dances there wll be an announcement of the Beard Contest wnners. Saturday wll be the bg day of the weekend begnnng wth a Sports Car Rally on Saturday afternoon. nterested persons should contact Greg Monsley, head of the Rally. Saturday nght wll brng a Student Concert by Stony Brook students themselves. f you have some talent and are nterested, contact Joe Beaudette, head of the Student Concert, for audtons. Durng the concert, the wnners of the Dsplay Contest wll be announced. The March weekend wll be clmaxed by the Sade Hawkns Day Dance sponsored by the Jewsh Student Organzaton after the Student Concert. Though we're stll a month away, t's tme to start preparng now for ths bg event whch ought to work started almost four years ago, s composed of four Executve Commttee members: Marty Doro, Peter Nack, ra Kalnsky, and Jeff Wenberg; Tom Drysdale, charman of the Resdence Board; Jack Guarner, charman of the Commuter Board; John Jones and Ed tkn of the Polty Judcary; and three delegates at large: Frank McColg& Bll Stegletz, and Clve Rchards. Uncorrected and unrevsed copes of the new consttuton are avalable to,any nterested students at the Polty Offce n the Gymnasum. The Commttee s holdng a prelmnary hearng open to the entre student body on Thursday nt, February 16, at 8:80 P.M. n J.N. lounge. Tte members of the Commttee vte any and all constructve comments and deas. MARCH WEEKEND PLANNED Events Concerts, Mood, Dance The qualty of applcants goes up every year because of adbe a great way to brng n the sprng on campus. The Dsplay competton s one of the events whch needs a good deal of preparaton begnnng rght now. Creatvty and qualty workmanshp of the Stony Brook student wll be tested n ths competton. The Quads, Commuters, Garden Apartments and any other nterested groups are elgble to compete. The theme, of course, s the end of wnter and the comng of sprng whch may be used lterally or fguratvely by each group. The com Contnued on Page 4 New Ph.D. Offered A new program of studes leadng to the degree of Ph.D. n Englsh and Amercan Lterature and Language wll begn n Sep. tember All requrements for the degree, ncludng the wrtng of the dssertaton, can be completed four years after recevng a B.A. or three years after recevng an M.A. Every canddate, begnnng wth the second year, wll be gven the opportunty to teach n the department, under approprate supervson and wth remuneraton for a mnmum of two semesters and for not more than four semesters. Contnued or Page 4 0

2 . ' R. PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 ourant, Leadng Physcst To Jn Staff Next Year Dr. Ernest Courant, one of the world's leadng authortes on the desgn of hgh energy numc accelerators, has accepted a tna Wte jadt atwhn ft at t State Unversty at Stony Brook as Professor n the nsttute for Theoretcal Ayscs and Fro fessor of tgtaetrmfg, eftvetve September 1. Professor Courant wll lead n develpfedt at Stony BWe of a complete program of struton and research n accelerator de Sgn, brdgng the Lds of physcs and enn, addton to partpatng na arety of prowts n theordt physcs. He wffl cot*ne as Senor Physcst at Brookhaven Natonal Labatory where he has been engaged, among other tngs, n desgn work for the 6O1000 BEV accelerator whch has been recommended to the Atomc Energy Commsson as the next logcal step n hgh energy accelerator development after the 200 BEV machne. Accordng to Dr. onn S. Toll, presdent of the UnverSft Oenter here, the new Stony Brook program wl be one of the most eomptrehenste soch efforts n the country ad wll thts serve a tatftal need. He sad that, beeause many of the most motant dscoveres n physcs have eome and wll contnue to come from hgh energy accelerators, t s essental that the Adne of a dzelerator desgn be treated on the unversty level. The new Stony Brook program as a cooperatve effort wth grekhaven, has the potental for makng Long sland an nternatonal headquarters for The Bookstore Subcommttee, created. by the Faculty Student Assocaton last sprng to help determne ways to mprove the, Bookstore's performance, has been meetng perodcally snce September. The Subcommttee has student, faculty and staff representaton. ts members are: Holger Herwg, Hstory Graduate student; Charles Hdffmann, Department of Economcs; Edward tkn, Class of 1968; Jurgen Krause, Personl Offce; and A60ny Larner, Department of Englsh. Mrs. Dorothy Keresey, Manager of the Bookstore, s an es offs eu, nonvotng member of the «roup. The Subcommttee has been dealng wth two sets of questons: (1) the defnton of a Bookstore's role n a Unversty context and (2) what mmedate steps can be taken to rase the qualty of the Bookstore's operatons. The group's early meetngs were devoted to gettng as complete a fnancal and operatonal vew of the store's actvtes as possble. Not only were all of the relevant reports studed but the group also benefted from the Busness Offcer's response to ts desgn and constructon specalsts n ths feld, he sad, as wen as a hosptable resource for both theorsts and exnperentalsts n hrgh energy physcs who wll come to the area from many parts of the globe for research and study. Dr. Courant's appontment completes the ntaton at Stony Brook of a trpartte program n all aspects of elementary partce physcs, ncludng programs n elementary partcle theory drected by Ensten Professor and Nobel laureate C.N. Yang, who heads the nsttte for Theoretcal Physcs; a program n expermental partcle physcs whch wll utlze the outstandng accelerator facltes at BN'L; and the new program of accelerator desgn under Dr. Courant's drecton. Codscoverer' n the early 1950's of the Alternatng Gradent Focusng prncple whch has been the bass for the desgn of al subsequent hgh energy acelerators, Dr. Courant has made many other contrbutons to accelerator development A natve of Goettngen, Germany, he obtaned hs B.A. from Swarthmore and hs M.S. and Ph.D. n physc from Rochester. Pror to hs assocaton wth Brookhaven whch began n the late fortes, he was research assocate n theoretcal physcs at Cornell. He was a vstng mntember of the physcs faculty at Prnceton n 195 and, n 195, vsted Cambrdge on a Fulbrght research grant. He has. been a consultant to the Atomc Energy Commsson and to other government agences. FSA Cnmmttee Recommends Bookstore Procedure Changes many questons. The presence of the store's manager at the Subcommttee's meetngs made t possble to receve much specfc nformaton and to convey to her the vared sentments ol students and faculty about the store's performance. to end the frst phase of ts actvty, the Subcommttee has made specfc recommendatons on desrable changes n the Bookstore's accountng, fnancal and operatng procedure, whch the FSA has mplemented. t has also nformed the FSA of certan changes n the store's routnes whch have been effected drectly and nformally as a result of Mrs. Neresey's presence at the group's meetng. One example of mprovement s that more adequately funded checkcashng servces are now avalable on Saturday. The Subcommttee sell be happy to receve suggestons or complants on the Bookstore. Correspondence oh these matters should be addrlsed ether to the Subcommttee charman, Dr. Charles Hoffmann, Department of Economcs, Humantes, Room 202 or the secretary, Mr. Edward tkn, Box 59, JS Dorm. Campus Notces Let the SAB sponsor YOU n the March Weekend Student ConcertAudtons to be held Frday, February 17, and Monday, February 20 from 711 p.m. n the Humantes Lecture Hall. * *.* t's not too late to sgn up for the March Weekend Beard Con Prces for t* longest, sparsest,. most orgnal beard. Sgnup deadlne s February 18. Call Hope * * * Help your dorm create a Dorm Dsplay for the March Weekend Dsplay Competton! * * * SOUNDNGS Saff There wll be a _ s staff meetng on February 16 at 8:30 n Humantes 305. We urge all members to attend. The agenda wll nclude a revew of all student materal submtted to the magazne up to ths juncture. f any member s unable to attend, please notfy Larry Shea at * * e. The Publcty Commttee of the SAB s now n the mddle. of a new exctng campagn. We are, and wll use methods of publcty not prevously employed on ths campus. An example of such an attempt are the arplanes now "flyng" n the dorms. There. are some of us who would lke to seeother ways to advertse events other than by oaktag. Bt n order to a sccmplsh ths goal we need 1) money {(hch we have); t) manpower '(whch we lack). One does not need to be greatly talented n art work to be n publcty. f you would lke to gve us a hand' andhlp be6 X freatve force by yourself contact the Polty Offce n the Gymnasum. (Phone 6786). * * * Electon News Electons for the offce of Representatve for the Freshman and Junor classes wll be held shortly. Any member of Freshman and Junor classes are elgble to run from Frday, February 17, through Frday, February 24. The electons wll take place n the Gymnasum on March 3, from 9:30 6:00. All those students nterested m runnng for ether post are requested to contact a nmeber of the Electon Board. Electon Board: Ellot Wyner, JN A223, Bunny Wesnger, GE FX24, Ralph Khmer, JS C22, S.A.B. PRESENTS THE JEFFERSON ARPLANE AND THE DALY FLASH SAT., FEB. 18 AT 8:30 P.M. Weekly Calendar February 15 February 21 Wednesday, February 15 12:90 Noon ELECTRCAL SCENCES COLLOQUUM Professor Stephen H. Unger, Columba Unversty Syntax Dkred Complers Faculty Lounge Engneerng Buldng 4:30 p.m. VARSTY BOWLNG Adelph Suffolk Gymnasum 8:90 p.ma BOLOGY FLM SERES Lfe Cye of the Montr h Black Wdow Spder Vanh~ng Prare Human Reproducton Audtorum Bology Buldng 8:00 p.m. MARD GRAS Coach House Thursday, Febrary 16 1:30 p.m. FRENCH CLUB FLM Hum. Lect. MATERAL SCENCES COLLOQUUM Dr. Haywood Blum, Brookhaven Natonal Laboratory The Hydrogen Atom n onc Solds. * Faculty Lounge Engneerng Buldng 3:30 p.m. ENGLSH COLLOQUUM Professor Avrom Fleshman, Mchgan State Unversty Thackeray ad MaeaAay Beyond Whg Hstory Faculty Lounge Humantes Buldng CMT p.m. and 7:00 p.m. FLM SHOWNGS by Rchard Leacock Edde Sachs (50 mnutes) An ntmate portrat of a famous race car drver, later klled n tk ndanapols 59, made durng that race and durng the trals before the race. / Physcs Audtorum /~ CONCERT (Musc Dept.) Unv. Theatre FWMby. Felmary 17 4:3< p.m. BOLOGY COLLOQUUM Dr. Ronald J. Barfeld, nsttute of Anmal Behavor Rutgers, the State Unversty Nenroendocrne Control of Reproductve Behavor n the Fowl Audtorum Bology Buldng 4:00 p.m. THE CHAR (50 mnutes) Paul Crump was n a Chcago jal, condemned to death for murder. n ths flm, made durng the months when attorneys Lous Nzer and Donald Page Moore were tryng to save hm, Crump lves through that tme of doubt. Saturday, February 18 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. HAPPY MOTHERS DAY (30 mnutes) A hlarous account of the reacton of small South Dakota town when Mrs. Fscher gave brth to quntuplets. Ths flm s a contemporary, Man Street, on flm. There the two versons of ths flm Mr. Leacock's, and one edted by ABCTV from the same footage. We wll show them both. CONCERT (Student Actvtes Board) Gym Sunday, February 19 2:40 p.m. REPUBLCANS YE NEW BREED (30 mnutes) An ntmate portrat of John Grener, young Republcan Tyro from Alabama, made durng the Goldwater campagn. STRAVNSKY A PORTRAT (58 mnutes) Out of two weeks of lvng wth Stravnsky n Hollywood, London, and Hamburg, Mr. Leacock has made a flm portrat of a gentle, lovable, genus. Menday, February 20 2:00 p.m. nformal vst wth Rchard Leacock n Faculty Lounge, Humantes Buldng. Everyone welcome. 4:00 pum. Colloquum, Humantes Audtorum Short presentaton by Rchard Leacock followed by dscusson led by Jack Ludwg (Englsh), John Newfeld (Theatre), Alan Kaprow (Art), Dave Sudnow (Socology), Rchard Hartzell (nstructonal Resources Center). GNORTH RESDENCE COLLEGE SKTS GCafetera Tuesday, February 21 8:00 p.m. NTERNATONAL CLUB

3 dw WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1.5, 1967 PAGE 3 PROMETHEUS SNOWBOUND FROM START... T~WSTER l See hw she rests her cheek upon bwr a1d. Oh, that were a glove upon that hand that mght towch that cheek. (Romeo and Julet). Where's Joe? TO FNSHO a* Wth the blzzard cancedng; the second day of classes some Stony Brook students spent ther tme playng "Twster" ndoors (above), whle somrce bravedf the comf and khg wnds to 1? (above4 lft0) Whle the snow cancelled chla.es for a day, t also stoppdg construct rr (below); Workers at the Campus Center constructon ste before the blzzard. j t a t's ne vtable. (Snowman ccurtesy G Bl) Photos by K. Sobel, K. Bromberg, and B. Beller of 12 nch snowfall. t...

4 PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY* FEBRUARY 15, 1967 NOR : STATESMAN WANTS PEOPLE TYPSTS PHOTOGRAPHERS FEATURE WRTERS COMC WRTERS NEWS WRTERS ~SPORTS WRTERS people nterested n the busness aspect of the STATESMAN, cartoonst, artsts, copy readers, people for techncal work, headlne wrters, layout assstants, researchers, people nterested n exchange, people who are nterested n any phase or aspect of the Statesman. People. Classfed Ad secton s beng expanded. Rates for students are $.20 per lne. For nonstudents $.25. Advertse cars annversares, personal notes, books for sale, brthdays, etc. BOX 200 SOUTH HALL RCCARD'S PZZAS and HEROS Small Pzza... Large Pzza... Jr. Pzza... Sclan Pe... Meat Ball Hero... Sausage Parmgana... Meat Ball Parmgana... Sausage Hero... Egg Plant Parmgana... Veal Parmgana... Pepper and Egg... CLUB SANDWCHES Roast Beef... Pastram... Corned Beef... Tonbue Turkey Salam... Salam and Egg... Pastram and Egg... Tuna Fsh... Veal and Pepper * * a * * * **0 **0 **0 **0 **0 Save Rccard's Checks Brng n $20.00 Worth of Checks and Receve FREE 1 PE and 2 COKES DEADLNE FEB : Vllage :. Meat Ball Tuna Fsh... Meat Ball Parmganat.75 Roast Beef... Sausage Amercan Cheese.. Sausage Parmgana.80 Ham... Pepper and Egg Ham and Cheese... Mushroom and Egg.75 Salam and Cheese Sausage and Peppers.75 Egg Plant... Meat Ball and Pepper*...75 o o o A> o o o o B v A> o~~~~~~~~~~0 Pzza * 0* * * * * * MM PR F% mc_ 09 m M6..M ED 19" E7 C0 ED X01 E%" NCR Ezra mc ac:lt MDR CEe Egg Plant Parmgana.. Veal Cutlet Parmgana Veal Cutlet... Veal and Pepper... Pastram.....a Hamburger Cheeseburger French Fres... Free Delveres Every Half Hour From 9 P.M. to 1:30 A.M ON YOUR BRTHDAY COME DOWN AND ENJOY A FREE LARGE PZZA z 1: 1:1 1:1 1)

5 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 PAGE 3 EUROPEAN TRAVEL ON A COLLEGESZED by Rolf Fuessler Ths artcle s the frst n a seres on travel n Europe on a college budget. t wll present the varous problems, consderatons and costs nvolved. The author, n collaboraton wth other travelers, wll attempt to gve as broad a vew as possble. At the concluson of the seres students may send n any specfc questons that they have concernng travel. Summer skng n Swtzerland, surfng n Portugal, sunnng on the Rvera, hkng across Yugoslava, sland hoppng n Greece, vstng the Louvre n Pars, Carnaby Street n London and a bull fght n Madrd are all wthn the means of the average college student who has the knack for economy and ngenuty. All t takes to travel to the contnent s $?50275 for a student charter flght. One wll he formed here on campus. There are other charter flghts through other organzatons; all one needs s a good ear and a good n. The charge covers the round trp fare, so at least f you're stuck over there, eventually there s a way back. Once abroad, students have survved wth $100 n ther pockets, but an average of $ s usually needed. For the fepale students an extra $100 should be added for ther shoppng and buyng sprees. There are two general ways to travel to Europe: as an Amercan watng to see the real Europe or as an Amercan tourst vstng all the attractons all the other Amercans are vstng' At tmes, certan places are more Amercan than Brooklyn. There s a sayng that f you spend one hour n an Amercan Express offce you.. wll meet someone that you know or haven't seen n years. The latter way to travel nvolves more money f you have money Comment; to spend t nvolves good hotels, good restaurants, steseeng tours and all the thngs that Amercans do at home and are used to at home. f a student really s nterested n seeng Europe and wshes to avod the hometown rush, a lttle love of adventure, ntestnal forttude and ntatve are needed. wll call ths way to travel the H and H method, whch s wdely used by a majorty of Europeans youth. The H and H method nvolves htchhkng and lvng n student hostels. Hchkng Htchhkng s qute a dfferent experence n Europe. There are no laws forbddng t and as a result t s qute a common way to travel. At tmes, t s the quckest way. The curous thng about European htchhkng s that there s no cause to stck one's thumb out. All you do s stand at the sde of the road lookng dejected, hungry and smlngly honest. Also, t s good to be Swedsh. Someone once dd a study and found that Swedes are pcked up more often than any other group. Each htchhker usually has a flag on hs knapsack to dstngush what country he hals from. t s also an extremely cheap way of travellng, the drver not expectng any monetary gan maybe a cup of coffee at X roadsde cafe or a pece of your twoday old. stale, French bread Language s really no barrer. A good proporton of Europeans speak Englsh and f they don't a small dctonary and/or a lttle sgn language wll go a long way. t s even more challengng when no one understands what you are sayng and you, have to nvent ways of makng a foregner understand. t also mproves your game of charades. n taly language sn't even necessary snce sgn language predomnates. Hostelng As to the latter part, hostelng, t nvolves spendng your nghts n a youth hostel a dormtory, bunkbed nventon where prces range for a nght's stay from $.30 n Span to $.50 n France, nstead of n a nce tourst or frst class hotel. n the hotel you meet retred Amercans on ther trp of alfetme, but rarely college students. t s n the hostels where you meet most of the European students. Hostels are almost lke college dormtores, except there are people from at least ten countres who are nterested n learnng and dscussng what college kds want to learn and dscuss from communsm to coeds. Hostels are where you fnd mpromptu folk sngs and poltcal dscussons. t s a place where you can cook your own delcous supper of a tomato, a can of macaron, and a pear; a place to do your own wash, a place to phlosophze, a place to argue, a place to laugh, a place to sleep all for a nomnal fee. And all these servces cannot be found n the good hotel. T'ere are hostels all over Europe and they range from the ultramodern at Areny POWELL'S ONLY CHLD'S PLAY BUDGET de Mar n Span, or a Swss chalet at Brauwald to old farmhouses n Germany and a medeval castle at Saverne n France. n some of the bg ctes the hostels are rght n the center of a hstorcal landmark as n Nuremberg, Germany where t s n the medeval Kngs Castle, home of Kng Barbarossa and many of hs successors. Many hostels have ther own recreatonal facltes as n San Sebastan, Span whch has a huge olympc swmmng pool. Some are n the mddle of town whle others are n the mddle of nowhere. So far we have gotten nowhere on our trp. n the remanng artcles of ths seres wll dscuss preparatons for the trp, once over there; thngs to do and see and a myrad of pertnent nformaton, Next week: Passports, forms, shotswhat to do before you leave. CORRECTONS n last week's Statesman artcle, "Summer Abroad," the dsadvantages of applyng for a job through the Swss agency, nternatonal Travel Establshment, were mstakenly omtted. Despte ts nexpensve prce $35 for a search fee the program has several drawbacks. The agency doesn't actually place students, t nforms them of specfc job opportuntes by gvng them prospectve employers' names. t s therefore up to the student to contact the employer and make hs own arrange. ments for the job, housng, work permts, health nsurance, etc. He also has no orentaton program tohelp hm adjust to the new culture. ;ga E v~:~4t e~bf~ By Mel Brown The present controversy over the poltcal fates of Congressman Adam Clayton Powell and Senator Dodd rases the queston of the extent to whch the "hgher mmoralty" has pervaded our poltcal nsttutons. The journalstc vendetta aga nst Congressman Powell s rather obvous. And t s successfully overshadowng a more mportant consderaton, that beng the determnaton of the fate of Senator Dodd. To descrbe these men as nstruments of a larger sckness upon whch the hgher crcles of government grows, would be to accuse both men of an extreme "bad fath" wthout touchng upon the real ssues whch nvolve these personaltes. n one respect am here commttng the same njustce to Mr. Powell that other representatves of the Medum have done, that s to consder hs legal and poltcal troubles wth only those of Mr. Dodd. However n dong so hope to rase questons n the mnds of the reader concernng the overwhelmngly based press whch has chosen to speak out aganst Mr. Powell, and the onedmensonal leadershp of the black bourgeos, who support hm. The press fnds t very easy to descrbe Mr. Powell (as n' the recent Sunday Tmes edtoral) as a "fugtve from the law" wth all the rather obvous bad connotatons of the labelng. However, whle venturng to ths extreme (and the charges aganst Powell beng well founded) n Mr. Powell's case, the recurrence of comments wth comparable depth about not only Mr. Dodd but also our Presdent and hs relatons wth Mr. Estes or even Mr. Baker have been suffcently toned down. When the press behaves n ths way, how s any conscentous poltcal acton by an nformed electorate to occur? f Mr. Powell s so easly labeled a crmnal then why s not our Presdent who has been n even worse trouble? n the larger scheme of thngs, workng Powell over s chld's play compared to Johnson or Dodd. t should be apparent however, that ths crtcsm does not seek to defend Mr. Powells conduct, although he s to an extent the vctm of a hostle press. As to the work he has been dong and hs relevance to the cvl rghts scene, black power advocates can readly depct Mr. Powell as far past hs prme. He shares the mentalty of the black bourgeos who submerge ther mnds n llusons of tokensm and f not smply that, a hollow rhetorc of "black progress"; and. where anythng n ther estmaton should be rghted (for no matter what the reason) all' of realty s nterpreted n terms of the ntegratondscrmnaton dchotomy. Ths s the devce whch Mr. Powell and hs close supporters has used contnually to manpulate the atttudes of the masses of the Mblack ghetto. Consderng even the latter, that s n hs good, though falsely founded favor, n the black ghetto. n the larger poltcal scheme, the excessve emphass upon Mr. Powell carres no weght and to the extent that ths s true there can be no justfcaton for hs beng deseated. r Mar. Weekend Contnued from Page 1 petng groups should submt ther deas and dagrams to Kathy Jeffrey, the head of the Dsplay competton, by February 18 to be elgble. Buldng of the floats should be done on Campus and any materals can be used whch ought to gve creatve students no lmt on ther creatblty. Thecost of dsplays can not exceed $70 and a lst of materals and ther costs must be submntted to the judges on Saturday, March 18. The SAB wll chp n $20 to each group for expenses. The dsplays should have a base of at least 4 by 4 feet and should be lfe sze f applcable. They should be permanent and functonal. Scale models, mascots, murals, scenes, just about anythng can be possble dsplay projects. One good example s the mosac n North Hall Lounge. The dsplays must be n the grls gym on Saturday, March 18 by 3:00 P.M. and judgng wll be between 3 and 8 P.M. The awards, whch are plaques awarded on the bass of subject, orgnalty, aptness and handlng skll wll be presented durng the ntermsson of the Student Concert on the evenng of March 18. New Ph.D. Offered Contnued from Page 1 Graduate students enterng wthout the M.A. or ts equvalent wll be elgble for fellowshp support and wll not normally assume teachng responsbltes n the frst year of graduate study. Graduate students enterng wth the M.A. or ts equvalent wll be elgble for Assstantshps n wth a stpend of $2, 575 for the academc year. Tuton s waved for holders of Assstantshps and Fellowshps. n addton to the facltes of the Unversty Lbrary, the Unversty wll provde traw por taton to and from the research lbrares of New York Cty. To obtan nformaton and applcatons wrte to the Drector of Graduate Studes n Englsh, Department of Englsh, SUNY at Ston% Brook, Long sland. Theatre Meetng He New Campus 7Theatre Group s pleased to announce that ts sprng producton wll be an evenng of lonesco, a presentaton of two of hs one act plays, "Thbe Bald Soprano" and "e Lesson". These are two of onesco's most hly regared works. Both are representatve of the best of Theatre of the Absurd, "The Bald Soprano" dealng wth the problems of communcaton between people today, and "The Lesson" a study n the methods of totaltaransm. The audton dates wll be announced at the Sprng meetng of the New Campus Theatre Group, scheduled to take place ths comng Sunday, February 19th at 8:30 P.M. n the Lttle Theatre n the Gymnasum. Both members and nonmembers are nvted to coe. n addton, new offcers for the 1967 year wll be ejected.

6 PAGE 6 L PAGE 6 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 Aganst The law "Governments are nsttuted among Men, dervng ther just powers from the consent of the governed, to secure the rghts of Lfe, Lberty, and the pursut of Happness." Ths s paraphrased from the Declaraton of ndependence. We mantan that ths sentment s stll vald today; that laws are passed to protect the ndvdual from the wrongs of socety, and the socety from the wrongs of the ndvdual, but n NO case to assume the motherly poston of protectng the ndvdual from hmself. Laws aganst the sale and use of marjuana n effect are puttng the government n just such a poston. f marjuana s shown to nduce n the taker a state of mnd whch s nclned toward crmnal acton, then we entrely agree that the government's functon should be to outlaw t for the protecton of all. But ths s not the case. Marjuana has not yet been shown to nduce ths state of mnd. The law merely ntrudes on the prvacy of the ndvdual who wshes to use marjuana merely n the pursut of a personal pleasure; The same (f not more) pleasure that mllons of people derve from smokng ordnary cgarettes, or from drnkng. n fact, smokng marjuana cannot even cause cancer as cgarettes do, or crrhoss of the lver as caused by alcohol. The pleasure n smokng marjuanas noxous to nobody but me one whosmokes, snce he must spend money to buy t. t s NOT however the funeton of government o tell the people how to spendther money. Crmnalty s sponsored by a law whch ntrudes on the rghts t s supposed to protect (namely Lfe, Lberty, and the pursut of Happness). llegalty only rases the attracton of marjuana, and ts prces. Crme s now sponsored due to the dffcultes n obtanng the money necessary to buy t. As shown by the cvl rghts strategy of cvl dsobedence, laws whch are abusve to the rghts of ndvduals WLL be volated by them. We, of the Statesman, therefore urge the repealng of ths law, ths usurper of rghts, whch we feel serves no legtmate purpose; but whch n beng broken sponsors a sprt of anarchy whch would be detrmental to any organzaton of government. Edtor edch Rolf Fessler 2466W9 Exchange Program An mportant part of the college eduatonal experence s the learnng that takes place outsde of the classroom. deally, ths s the place where students of dfferent backgrounds and outlooks dscuss and broaden ther vews. At our Unversty the student body's homogenety prevents such dscusson, so that most students receve a narrow educaton. The Statesman recognzes the Unversty's responsblty, as a state nsttuton, to gve state students frst prorty n admsson. We therefore do not urge that qualfed state students be replaced by outofstate students, but. that a formal exchange program between Stony Brook and colleges and unverstes throughout the country be begun. Many U.S. colleges already have these programs where two campuses exchange equal numbers of students for ether one or two semesters, wth no credt loss to any of the students. Such a program would be both an educatonal experence for the Unversty's exchange students and students who reman at Stony Brook. t would also help the Unversty attract the thnkng student, the student who wants an educaton as well as a degree. Snow Removal? Wth the advent of last week's blzzard, the campus ground crew proved themselves unprepared, nept and underequpped. The complete absence of planned snow removal, combned wth the lack of lghtng on campus, produced a stuaton extremely dangerous to the safety of the entre Unversty. Condtons for class last Wednesday were perlous; the lbrary hll could have served as a sk slope and the dormtory walks and parkng lots were unpassably bured. The snow had stopped some twelve hours before classes began, so why couldn't the ground crew get to work? The few roads and sdewalk surfaces that fnally were plowed proved to have been made worse when the ce underneath was exposed. t seems to us that the ground crew has not learned of salt or sand. The absence of these remedes Contnued on Page 7 ^ffkffg^m.m f^ U *LAJLJ * A! C/^ LMJ SjvJ LN Maagng Edor Mel Brown Edtors Assstant Edtors CoCopy... Barbara Edelman, Chrs Koslow News... Janet Lanza Feature... Jean Schnall Photography... Joel Elas News... Ernest Frelch Manageral Busness... Greg Wst Photography... Ken Sobel Exchange... Danel Kaplan Actng Revew... Alfred Walker Secretary Renee Sten Sports... Fred Thomsen Head Typst... Helen Berg STAF F Marc Aaron, Donna Abbafccho, Alan Adler, Norman Bauman, Bruce Boller, Los Bonnctt, Wayne Blodgett, Kenny Bromberg, Jon Cappel. Phl Chn, Sharon Cooke, Elane Cress, Ken Donow, Arthur Dookow, Sfeatf Eber, Ruth Esenborger, Rhoda Elson, Clar Fever, Sharon Fef, Marc Feldman, Elon Geffnmr. Sally Grrchck, Alan Gold, Mke Goldsten. Pat Goral. Dane Gordon, Marshall Green, Horv" Kaser. Paul Kamen, How Klen. Stan Koplow, Nel Lower, Marlyn Lehr. Robert Levne, Fred Lrshey, Nel Louson, Joan McGure. Kathy McNcholas, Susan Moseff. Jan* Murphy, Jonathan Nmww. Mke Nash. Stan Osfrow. Pat Perrone, Stfva Plnck, Julete Rappna, Jeff Rcken, ENan Romano. PaWl Rosenfhat. Roberfa Sahzman, Dhna Sharon, Steve Sdorsky, Alan Sdran., Gory Sloana, Barbara Sugarman. Kan Sutftr, Mauraan Tomasulo, Mchael W sglas, Mke Wernow. Steve Wglr., tme Zaeal. U~g»^ E~tdta are we s9e op0on of the Edllrl Board. All other sgned de not _ express the pm o the Board. 'Let Each Become All He s Capable of Beng!' All letters to the edtor must reach Box 200 South Hall no later thawm 5:00 P.M. the Swturday before the Wednesday msse. Names wll be wthheld on request but d letters must bear the Sahor's sgnatle. Edtorl To thd edtor: Though yotw edtoral of February 8 ("Academc Freedom Des n Calforna") was extremely tmely, you faled to rase the queston of whether any unversty can be suffcently ndependent of outsde nfluence to pursue ts proper goals. As Fred Hecknger, the educaton edtor of the New York Tmes, revealed last week, even for "relatvely mnor needs, New York's State Unversty must wat for ther requests to be processed by State Government offces". Though t s true that no exoffco poltcal members are on the State Unversty of New York's Board of Trustees as n Calforna, the fact that the board's charman and vcecharman are apponted by the ncumbent governor warnng. s an omnous f the role of a unversty s to seek the truth, regardless of whether that truth s dslked by the government, the corporatons or the general publc, t can only be accomplshed by remanng free of outsde nfluence. But f a State Unversty, or even a prvate unversty, s dependent upon outsde funds furnshed by the government, by the corporatons and by the general publc, can t really have the necessary ndependence, under the present condtons, to queston the values and goals of our socety, rrespectve of the reactons t may engender? Though ths wrter s unable to offer a total soluton to the prob. lem of academc freedom, Te Stalesmaz could strke a blow for unversty ndependence by % s ' t! t h, ' * E mandng that the appoctment of the Board of Trustee members be taken oxt of the hands of the Governor add be placed n the hands of a qualfed group of academcans. Mark Lazerson To the Edtor: Whoever wrote your edtoral, "Academc Freedom Des n Calforna", was laborng under gross msconceptons and a partcularly jaundced poltcal vew. t s a shame that the edtors of the Statesman are slowly beng nfected wth the vrus that seems to be nvadng college campuses, namely: Bleedng Heart Lberalsm. As Governor and hghest elected offcal of the state, Mr. Reagan has the undsputed authorty of choosng any person he so wshes to head the Unversty of Calforna. As governor, t s hs responsblty to choose the man X most capable of fulfllng ths duty; that man s obvously not Clark Kerr. The dsmssal of Kerr, taken n an encompassng vew, was not prmarly concerned wth "academc freedom, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly". These freedoms have to do more wth the mmedate problem at Berkeley. Your whnng edtoral wrter has purposely gnored the topc n queston, and has made overt references to the notorous Free Speech Movement. The $400 tuton we pay here at Stony Brook s not a crpplng burden. Nether would t be at Berkeley. What t wll accomplsh s rddng the campus of bums, malcontents and anar Contnued on Page 7

7 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 PAGE 7 letters Contnued from Page 6 chsts who are parastes of the worst type. People, and hestate to use the word, lke these do not use the unversty for educaton, but rather as a haven; they are parastes n the warm academc womb who have to take advantage of the benefts of an educaton, and spend a comfortable lfe off the Calforna taxpayer. Lke most lberals, your edtoral wrter s lvng n a dream world, concerned wth lofty feelngs and nane slogans, but completely devod of any practcalty. He states that "Mr. Reagen wshes nether to respect ths judgement (sc) nor the academc freedom t mples..." Your wrter has dscovered a relatonshp whch does not exst. t s one thng to crtcze Kerr's dsmssal, but t s qute another to lnk t to "freedom of speech". n dong so, your wrter has completely skrted the ssue of the frng of Kerr, and hs edtoral emerges as a defense of leeches. Ths, hope, was not hsr purpose. f t was, very sorry for hm. Mchael Nash Armstrong Admonshed To Xhe Edtor: feel. Ths letter s n reference to that blge that Mr. John W. Armstrong fosted on the readers of that venerable tablod, the Statesman. Frst of all, of all the recent moves (.e. "BlowUp"., "Chushngura". "A Man for all Sea sons", "Olga's House of Shame") why dd Mr. Armstrong choose "The Wld Angels"? Perhaps no other moves were playng n Sound Beach on that partcular weekend. Well, whatever hs reasons, be they Freudan or economc, why were they splattered on Page 6? After choosng ths medocre producton, Armstrong began hs vvsecton wth a dscusson on the photography of the flck. Mentonng "precson" and "fludty" as qualtes of the move, he neglected to add that such qualtes also exst n Army Bathroom Hygene Tranng flms. The cnematc state of the art s such today that even Ronald Reagan, asssted by Clark Kerr and a set of clean lenses could have done the trck. Next, Jack the wondercrtc mentoned that the flm s comparable to "Hud". Besdes the resemblance of Nancy Snatra to Melvyn Douglas, any other lnks between the two appear as shallow as the message of one of Mss Snatra's songs. Equally shallow s "Bosley" Armstrong's phraseology. The use of such phrases as "flmc", "angry amateursms" and the rare gem "conformstc" shows an nadequate grasp of the wde range of profundtes avalable to today's quascrtc. What can we expect next? A detaled crtque of "The Son of Hercules n the Valley of the Mole Men" perhaps? At least we can fervently hope that Mr. Armstrong wll get off of ths phallc motorcycle hangup. Thomas Tregla Ralph 0. Demer Paul Kurtzky Poster Confuson To the Edtor: As a scence major, am qute dstressed by the mprecson of the posters prnted to publcze the Jullard Orchestra's concert February 11. No doubt Haydn wrote enough symphones to confuse anyone attemptng to order them, but s Symphony No. 24 (purported to be "La Poule" by the poster) near enough to Symphony No. 83 (whch many nonposter people call "La Poule") to be mxed up wth t? As a "cultured" February transfer student, ths ntal greetng s qute dsappontng. f were both a "cultured" musc major and a current transfer student, would probably be so annoyed as to go back to where came from, unless, of course, preferred mud to paved streets. Barouquen Serenty Wheat Law vs. Fed. Law To the Edtor; *nl~ College Plan by TOM DRYSDALE By desgn a unversty s an nof a number of consttuent elements wth the common purpose of sharng deas and knowledge that wll eventually be mplemented toward some productve and progressve end. Ths communty should be a unfed whole, wth an dentty and a system that faclltates coordnaton between the respectve elements. say should be, because the major unverstes today tend not to be unfed corporatons of elements, but multverstes due to dsorentaton of parts and ambguty of doman. Because of the pressures of rapd development, overcrowdng and any number of nternal admnstratve problems nvolvng red tape and other functonal nadequaces, communcaton s dffcult and the whole separates nto unts. No partcular element s really at fault, yet the consequences are often sad to be the responsblty of one or another of the more vulnerable areas of the unversty body. Stony Brook s no excepton to Mr. Erne Frelch stated n a student opnon column enttled "The Wheat Law", whch appeared n the last ssue of the Statesman, that he shares wth the Three Vllage Herald a respect for the law. Yet, wonder how he can make such a statement n vew of the fact that he chastses the Unversty Admnstraton for upholdng the laws of our state. beleve that one must realze that our Unversty s not some planet off n outer space, but rather an ntegral part of our state and county. As such we cannot escape the realtes of the world around us; we cannot wrte our own rules when they contradct those of socety. The People of the Unted States n Congress assembled and the People of the State of New York have decreed that they consder the possesson of marjuana llegal. They have n no uncertan terms spelled out the penaltes for volaton of these statutes. One must remember that the State Unversty of New York s a part of the very same government whch wrote the statute. ts offcals are state employees, and as such have a responsblty to the People of the State of New York to uphold ts laws. To do otherwse would be a volaton of the people's trust. There are those who say that snce the Unversty does not enforce ts regulaton on alcohol, t should not enforce the ban on narcotcs. However, there s a clearcut dstncton between the two. Possesson of alcoholc beverages s a volaton of Unversty regulatons, not State or Federal law. Aeftaw' npty prohbts sellng alsohole beverages to persons under 18. Mr. Frech further suggests that "the nterests of the students was sacrfced for what some body thought to be the nterest of the Unversty Communty as a whole." t would seem to me, though, that all students are fully Contnued on Page 10 these problems and has ts share of faults. Some of the more obvous stem from poor student/faculty ratos whch separates these bodes due to lack of communcaton. Resdence space s lmted, resultng n the necessty for a great percentage of commuters, to a great extent alenatng ther element. Specalzaton and strct currcular demands dentfy the graduate student, curtalng hs degree of overall partcpaton. Qualtatvely, nstructon suffers, learnng suffers, expresson suffers and respect falters. Unty s lost and drected progress s at a stalemate. The most apparant answer s reorganzaton. Yet some groups urge further segregaton whch defeats motvatonal ncentve from the very outset. Whle demandng more personal respect and consderaton, academcally and socally, they ferment mstrust of the very bodes than can afford the answer. hey suggest a wthdrawal from actve contact wth the other elements. Should the nseure ego or sophomorc mpetuosty of a partcular group dsrupt the unversty be. cause that group feels oppressed by ts elders. Accordng to a number of clches about weak Contnued on Page 10 POLTCS: nsde Out M. 0 Alb By Davd Sussman We have no student government at Stony Brook. The Executve Commttee s nothng more than an advsory commttee. The legslaton t passes, the money t allocates, the club charters t approves, must be sgned by the Dean of Students Offce to become vald. An admnstrator told me that the dea of autonomous student government s "absurd", and that, at best, student government can be consdered student admnstraton. Ths atttude of acceptng or rejectng the E. C. as an advsng commttee has had ts effects on the members of the E.C. At ts February 5 and 8 meetngs, the E.C. faled to muster a quorum. ts members suffer from the same frustraton and dsgust that affects other students. They seem to feel that students don't care. Ths has resulted n a large number of resgnatons and absences and the falure of the E.C. to communcate wth the student body. The student body has allowed ts representatves to get away wth a medocre performance. Along wth other facts mentoned, ths has resulted n a 'nogovernment". f we want government nstead of "nogovernment", we can talk to members of the E.C. and get them on the rght track. We can talk to faculty about a studentfaculty setup that wll take the authorty of government from the admnstraton. n short, we must act f we want to be a dete nng factor n unversty polcy. The members of the E.C. have faled to gan authorty. Trplng, the bookstore mess and parkng problems, for nstance, are all due, n part, to ths lack of authorty. (Ths E.C. could have prevented all of these problems.) We wll deserve what we get! '' ~.' ' *.** ' "* Snow Removal: Contnued from Page 6 astounds us and t s a wonder that more accdents and njures dd not result. DTe students are concerned wth ther safety, even f the ground crew s not. t s an abomnaton that the roads and paths were treacherous a week after thes now storm. THE COLLEGE PLAN AND ADLER PLAN Adler Plan ALLAN ADLER 'The world s not a prson house, but a knd of sprtual kndergarten where mllons of bewldered nfants are tryng to spell "God" wth the wrong blocks.' E. A. Robnson The college plan seeks to elmnate some of the basc faults of ths unversty by havng faculty members lve n the dormtores. t s hoped that students wll take advantage of the consequent opportuntes, for that s what wll determne the ultmate success or falure of the plan. have a number of reservatons about the plan. Frst of all, faculty members have been lvng n the dormtores n apartments. To a certan extent, ths has promoted personal tes between some students and some faculty members, and has mproved the cultural and ntellectual clmate. Therefore, n order to judge the worth of the plan, we must decde what qualtes the masters have that faculty members who have lved n the dorms haven't had. The masters are known to be accessble to the students; ths s the only dstncton of sgnfcance. t provdes a key for understandng what the college plan actually does. 'Me plan gves students and faculty members a great deal of opportunty to meet and to consder problems of nterest to them. The essental features of the college plan whch can mprove exstng condtons are the known accessblty of the masters and the fact that n ts workngs, t can transcend offcal structures. The most mportant problem that the plan must face s the general despar due to the takes torleavet character of unversty lfe. Unversty requrements serve only the bureaucracy. The currculum remans ever mmune to student apprasal. The student government has establsped commttees to study both the problem of currculum and the problem of unversty requre. ments, but even f ther recommendatons are adopted, t wll only be after a panfully long process, fraught wth red tape and sulled wth rrelevant concerns. Moreover, the student government has perhaps as much Contnued on Page 8

8 . = : : _ w PAGE 8 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 ADLER PLAN Contnued from Page 7 Contact wth students as do the qcademc commttees. The student government s a good model for the chef defects of the college plan. Students n student government can be roughly dvded nto two classes. n the frst class can be placed those who do nothng. The other class conssts of students who consstently overburden themselves wth publc servce. Those who do work, work poorly, won't trust anyone to do a job that they mght do themselves and they dscourage student partcpaton n student government. Rather, what s nurtured s a feelng that "well, t's ther job and they should do t but let's not even bother tellng them what's wrong because they aren't gong to do anythng anyway". Ths s the great defect of the college plan: that t can so easly perpetuate ths tradton of mpotence n whch we have floundered for so long. n other words, the plan does not provde the one element essental to ts success. That element can only come from the students. The plan must fal unless the students are prepared to take care of themselves. To llustrate, suppose a snowstorm makes t mpossble for cars n G parkng lot to move. Suppose further that G parkng lot s not scheduled to be cleared of snow for two weeks. Students actng n accordance wth the tradton of mpotence would wat for Godot to come wth a snow * l GAVNO'S Under New Management Such as: n : plow. f they weren't so used to passng the buck, they could go out wth shovels and do the job themselves. Now, t so happens that n order to get shovels, we would have to submt a number of forms and awat for Godot altogether. We try other possbltes. n ths nstance, we mght be nspred to borrow some buckets from a few jantor's closets on the halls and use them. To the extent that the college plan can accommodate such selfrelance, t s most desrable. Otherwse t merely serves to guard a stagnant fen. Here one mght well ask, "Suppose the despar at the taketorleavet character of the unversty s remeded; how wll the other problems be solved?" mentoned the problem of currculum before. Let me llustrate the modes of thought that are nvolved n ts treatment. A Pete & Edth's Specal DRY CLEANNG SALE MEN t s rdculous to work drectly to change the currculum. The currculum s merely the result of a greater ll. Even f we succeeded, we would not have gven any real meanng to college attendance. We would only have abandoned an absurdty whch s ratonal and coherent for one whch s rratonal and ncoherent: Take t or leave t. LADES Sut, 2 pr. slacks, 2 col 2 skrts, 2 pr. slacks, 2 ored sweaters or any colored sweaters or any combnaton... 99f combnaton.. 99f 2 whte sweaters 2 whte sweaters ( 25 each ( 25 each 6788 Stll Featurng: The Mn=Pe ** And ntroducng ~TRPLE DECKER HEROS There are other ways to leave t. propose that students who are nterested n a subject arrange ther own semnar or tutoral nformally. further propose that a commttee be establshed to act as a clearng house for such semnars. Ths commttee would do no more than to nform nterested faculty members that suchandsuch semnar s beng organzed. Ths proposal has a number of vrtues. Lke the college plan, t transcends offcal structures n ts workngs. t allows students a greater opportunty to educate themselves. t allows an nformal teacher evaluaton. t supplements the college plan wthout ncorporatng the college plan's major defect. t avods ths defect because t cannot be adopted f the mpetus for ts adopton does not arse from wthn the student body tself. Turkey, Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato Tuna, Slced Egg, Lettuce and Tomato FREE DELVERES EVERY NGHT 75t FROM 9:00 P.M. TLL 1:30 A.M *o! 5. A.B. presents An nformal Concert n Celebraton of the Annversary of the Brth of our Frst Presdent George Washngton featurng TOM RUSH on Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 8.30 p.m. Free tckets for students n Box Offce f you're a '67 Grad... You'veGot A Date Moday, February 27 wth the Man from Dow f you really want to do somethng, be somebody and use your ablty, you won't rsk mssng ths one. Regardless of your feld Chemcal. Mechancal, ndustral, Electrcal or other dscplnes of Engneerng, Chemstry, Marketng, Busness Admnstraton, Lberal Arts. f you lke dong and accomplshng, chances are there's a unque spot for you n our dversfed research, development, manufacturng, marketng or related areas. Ths s ONE DATE you'll want to make and KEEP! Contact your Placement Offce today. THE f you can't see the Man from Dow, contact: Drector of Corporate Recrutng DOW CHEMCAL CO. P.O. Box 628 Mdland, Mchgan Locatons n nearly every state n the country and throughout the entre free world, wth major manufacturng locatons n: Calforna * Colorado * llnos Lousana * Oho Mchgan Texas An equal opportunfy employer '^33!D!

9 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 PAGE 9 :^ R WARHOL'S CHELSEA GRLS Jullard Makanowtzky By Norman Bauman Drama and move have long followed an ancent theatrcal tradton. The stage play s a representaton of realty, a fctonal creaton wth a development, clmax and resoluton. Flm has freedoms whch allow t to work outsde ths format to advantage. The mechancal propertes of the flm allow new forms. There are two ways n whch the flm can represent realty. t can produce a false realty, a fantasy, a le. The Hollywood flm creates, as Nathanal West ponted out, a fantasy world n whch no one beleves; the mage s one the screen and everythng the scene contans s a prop. The second use of the flm s as an undenable record of what has actually occurred n front of the camera. Ths s the tradton of the documentary, the scentfc use of the camera and the use of the camera as court evdence. Ths s the use that Warhol makes of the camera. The camera work s sloppy, and constant ntrusons remnd us that ths s a move n front of us: the camera goes out of focus, the camera overexposes the flm, the shots seem to be constructed the way they are because of the way the camera handles, but always there s conscousness of the camera. There are no cuts n the flm, only zooms provng that the flm was shot as s, from begnnng to end, wthout the cuts and tme dstortons that are the most asc artstc lluson of the flm. The result s that we beleve that whatever s on the screen actually happened n front of the camera once. As Mr. Armstrong ponted out last week, sloppness and conscousness of the flm are necessary to make realty belevable. The problem whch Warhol solves s makng the unbelevable realty belevable. The form of the presentaton s a result of the physcal propertes of the flm. Flm comes n 1000 feet rolls, so the sequences are 1000 feet long (about twentyfve mnutes). Zoom shots produce a move whch can't be doctored, so Warhol uses zooms. Two moves are projected onto the screen smultaneously. One runs off, the traler s projected onto the screen, fnally t goes off and the projectonst changes the roll. Only one sound track s used at a tme, gvng an emphass to one and keepng the two scenes dstnct. The scenes are usually related to each other: one wll have acton, the other wll be a sequence of studes, or there wll be matchng acton n both shots, etc. ' The subjects of the scenes are frends of Warhol's: a pretty grl, a prest and pentent, a collecton of bsexual sadomasochsts, a dyke pll pusher, a group of grls, a famly, a couple of fags n bed, a drag queen and a real grl, a fagget exhbtonst. The acton, what there s, takes place n what are presumably hotel rooms. Most of the movement s produced by zooms and pans of the camera. The people go about ther actvtes: the grl just sts, and the camera takes dfferent shots of her, the prest confesses the pentent, the sadomasochsts bnd someone and strangle hm, the dyke receves telephone calls and sends people off to stashes, and so forth. On the screen, n ther conversaton and actons, the characters unfold. Personaltes are beng explored n the most realstc manner possble: by twenty mnutes n front of a camera that records everythng wth ruthless ndfference, lke the drama student's exercse of "observng", on flm that has not been cut or altered n an edtng room. Some of the personaltes are qute capable of expressng themselves. The personalty nteractons are partcularly nterestng. They have a specal talent for puttng on lttle scenes, lttle games, lttle jokes of the sort that frends toss at each other when they're hgh. The next step after ths sort of banter s rtual Warhol does wthout the format of drama that has been handed down from the Greeks. He s predrama, prertual, a step n the development of rtual. Hs junkes go through a rtual wth a spke that has more relevance to ther stuaton, and the stuaton of many of us, than the Oedpus Cycle or Communon. f Chrst came to earth today he mght fnd pot a more meanngful sacrament than bread or wne to share wth hs dscples. f he wanted to share the sacrament wth as many as possble, he would use today's mass medum, the flm. Ths flm has a certan shock value for some people. The shock comes from forcng a recognton of realty on mnds that have been n the habt of denyng realty. Ths s not a glamorzed, Playboy world of lust, t s the real thng, n all ts dsgustng glory, wth pubc har, odor, perverson, d&sftr7t>on. For ffty years the antseptc mass medum has suppressed everythng. offensve. t has even created the lluson that there s nothng offensve. Ths flm uses technques whch preclude lyng and demonstrates the truth. f Warhol does no more than force awareness that people take junk, that people have gentals, that there are other knds of sexual desres besdes heterosexual ones and that human relatons are not frendly but vcous, he wll have fulflled a socal msson. How does today's socal revolutonary convey hs nnovatons to socety: How does he tell the emperor that he has no clothes? He uses, most dramatcally, the flm. The century of Freud, Joyce and Htler s gradually acknowledgng passons whose exstence has been dened. There has been a belef n the ultmate goodness of man. Warhol s not oblgated to recognze ths. Warhol's message, and the message of a new generaton s: ecco homo. Ths s man, n all hs passons, wth no whtewash. You must accept t. The camera cannot le. By Robert Lovne Last Saturday evenng the Jullard Orchestra, under the drecton of Paul Makanowtzky, presented a successful program of musc from the Baroque and Classcal eras. Mr. Makanowtzky was also voln solost for the two concerts performed. The Women's Gymnasum, whch was flled to capacty, served as the concert hall. Brsk Pacng From the very start of the frst work, Bach's A mnor Voln Concerto, one could see that the concert was not gong to drag. Mr. Makanowtzky's temp through,out were lvely, and n ths frst work, well suted. The seventeen man orchestra played accurately and wth pleasng tone. The solost seemed to have no trouble wth the extremely brsk and rousng fnal movement, and hs playng was always senstve. n the second work, Mozart's Voln Concerto No. 3 n G major, Mr. Makanowtzky turned n a magnfcent frst movement (wth a bref, well played cadenza). But the second movement marked.q.e.t. *HUH? The nterquad Expermental Theatre s an old pool room n the basement of G dorm. n the theatre, plays wrtten drected, or performed by students are presented. The plays can deal wth anythng from Greek drama to the The Theatre of the Absurd. Most mportantly,.qe.t. s expermental. There wll be adaptons of plays, readngs; anythng feasble wthn lmtatons of space and funds. HEYWOOD'S MUSC SHOPPE E. Setauket Vllage Mart East Setauket, N. Y Strng Wnd Percusson nstruments & Accessores REPARS DONE ON PREMSES Largest Sheet Musc Department n the Area DSCOUNTS TO ALL SUSB STUDENTS Adago suffered from slghtly too fast pacng. Some of ts lyrcal beauty felt was sacrfced by rushng through t. The thrd movement also was too fast, once or twce causng the strng secton to play a bt slopply. However, must say that n general the orchestra (wth flutes and oboes, and horns added for ths concerto) played hghly professonally. They were young, but hghly polshed, muscans. They had obvously been very well re. hearsed, and the result was most gratfyng. Vrtuoso Ensemble Any doubt of the orchestra's ablty was quckly dspelled wth the fnal work, Haydn's 83rd Symphony. Here agan, the temp were fast, but most effectve. The openng movement s a test for any voln secton's ensemble ablty, and the Jullard strngs were remarkable for ther accuracy and beauty of tone. The fnale contans some beautful passages for flute, and they were well handled by the frst flutst. Acoustcally ths pece suffered least from the fact that the concert hall was a gymnasum (throughout Mr. Makanowtzky's playng, the tones all but dsappeared). n all then, asde from a few temp problems, both Mr. Makanowtzky's stuns nng vrtuosty and, on a smaller scale, that of the orchestra, shone splenddly. The need for a large, real concert hall s becomng more and more obvous on. campus, both to furnsh fne performers such as these wth the equpment they deserve. and to assure that n the future, people wll not have to be turned away at the door becuase of a lack of space. t s hoped that.q.e.t. wll present a play, readng, or whatnot every two weeks. The frst producton wll be an adapton of My Far Lady, drected by Marc Leavtt. Ray Patterson wll play Professor Hggns and Anne Davson wll play Elza Doolttle. For further nformaton on ths group please contact: Mke Shapre (actng and drectng), Rche Puz 6851 (producton). "

10 PAGE 10 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY T 5, 1967 Letters Contnued from P'age 7 aware of the law and the rsks nvolved n volatngr t. The choce s thers. f they are caught socety wll brand them as crmnals. Each penon must wegh the pros and cons and then 'deede. However, should they be caught, they must lvee wth tee 'decson they alone made, and accept ts consequence; s. Students at Stony Brook lve n a real world, and as mature young adults they cannot cexpect the Unversty to protect tthem from t. W"lf % la/ There are some (myssad nut ur eluded) who beleve that the present statutes are umjust. To them would say; use normal pressure group actvty to get the law changed. ff socetyr concurs, you wll, as always happens n our Consttutonal proc ess, have your way. f not, you must be prepared to accept soc ety's de to cson. Should you stllchoose must be prce. volate the law, you wllng to pay socety's Ronald Sarner Comments On S.D.S. Letter To the Edtor:... am. greatly dstressed by the vew of the Students for a Democratc Socety presented n the letter by Messrs. Kugler, ndus, Ramrez and Gerng. t was never stated that campus SDS agreed wth the flms n queston; n fact few, f any, of the members had seen the flms pror to ther showng. t mght just as well be assumed that the COCA s a neonaz front because they showed. Trumph of the Wll. We merely felt that the flms would present the war from a pont of vew not generally avalable to the Amercan publc whch, n fact, t dd. As far as the factual content Wf the flms s concerned, there may, n fact, have been naccurate statements or staged scenes, but f one s to queston the valdty of the Natonal Lberaton Front flms, he must frst queston the valdty of hs normal channels of nformaton. 7The fact s that the Unted States Government has not been noted for ts extreme honesty about the Vetnam war. Several years ago, accordng to the government, we were n Vetnam n a purely advsry capaety because we had no rght to ntervene mltarly n acvl war. Before that, our only role n Vetnam was the protecto of Unted States ctzens n Sagon. Amercans found out about North Vetnamese peace felers not from ther own govenment, but rather, from a Canadan newspaper story; and our presdet, who so sharply deplored the statements of Barry Goldwater, s, accordng to Goldwater, "...dong just.what sad 1d do' Our m meda, partcularly tdevson, ae aso gulty of feed Mg us _opga Speang of ew pepe ha bee brought up wth brutalty and volence n televson and the moves, psr chatrst Fredrc Wertham, n a recent artcle n the New Yor Thnmes, sad 'The audence s so condtoned from chldhood that one fnds Vetnam fghtng pctwures really tame stuff and s easly mapulated wth regard to volence by the huge publc relatons establshment that has been constructed at the top of the mltary setup. And the wellaccomplshed task of these publc relatons experts s to teach us not revulson aganst war and volence, but receptvty to t. Practcally every TV newscast now has some war pctures. n effect, these really are war commercals." The authors also fal to draw dstnctons between the natonal SDS, the campus SDS and ndvdual members of the campus organzaton. As far as the ncdents wth recruters are concerned, the campus SDS voted to try to set up an nformaton table along sde of the recruter. Nothng more. Harassment was solely on an ndvdual bass and should be condemned or commended as such. n reference to natonal SDS postons, t should be emphaszed that, whatever the postons of natonal SDS, the campus SDS s exactly what ts members choose to make t. Membershp n campus SDS does not re qure membershp n the natonal organzaton, and, n fact, less than half of the members actually do belong to natonal SDS. n refernce to natonal SDS postons on "breakng the law", ths s advocated only when the ndvdual's conscence fbrbds hm from takng part n the war. n ths case t s felt that he s obeyng a more mportant law. Even General Hershey sad that f he felt that a COLLEGE PLAN Contnued from Page 7 lnks n chans and the whole beng greater than the sum of t's parts, don't thnk so. De fensve dvson of the elements can only lead to collapse, where most wll suffer. Wthdrawal and ntroverson s not a constructve cure. f students, faculty, or admnstraton demand cooperaton, and cooperaton s at best a compromse of desgns for the equty of the whole, then each must be prepared to concede to a degree. Ego or self Argtone s a luxury, and t's gong to take a concerted effort on everyone's part to create an deal cotmunty wth an dentty and a drecton. The college plan tself s the re. sult of a concerted effort by representatves of all levels of the unversty. Yet agan some are tryng to defeat t before t even begns to functon. The college plan s a means of ntegratng the unversty on an narmal level, wth socal and currcular consderaton. t has been deged accordng to suggestons, but not subject to the demands of rep resentatves of the faculty, andmnstraton and for a greater part by the student body tself. t s... war was mmoral, he would go to jal rather than serve. would hope that n the future, the authors wll be more careful n ther accusatons. Arthur Doskow To the Edtor: A letter n the February 8 ssue of the Statesman questons the "usefulness" of the Students for a Democratc Socetes. The ponts consttutng the authors' objecton were the followng: "1) The S.D.S. sees no wrong n harassng members of the U.S. Armed Forces when they are on campus... " "2) The S.D.S. encourages people to break the law..." "3) The S.D.S. s an extremely leftstorented group..." cannot condone SbSs actons towards members of the Armed Forces: thnk such acton s fundamentally opposed to SDS's own polcy upholdng free nqury and unhampered dscusson. However, do not thnk that the other two ponts consttute a sgnfcant objecton. do not know that SDS has, as a matter of polcy, encouraged draft.card burnng or refusa: to be nducted though they have dscussed the ramfcatons of such a poston and though ndvdual members of SDS favor those actns and slaughter n Vetnam. They do not consder ther actons detrmental to socety; they seek rather to oppose the degeneratve force of war. They recognze the sgnfcance of the Nuremburg Trbunal and ts regard for the ndvdual conscence and the need to act, when necessary, n opposton to the State. Fnally that SDS s a leftst group s hardly, n and of tself, objectonable. That certan SDS chapters "receve ther nformaton materal from communst organzatons" does not mean, as the authors may wsh to mply, that they accept ths nformaton uncrtcally or are themselves communst. At any rate, t's hard to take a poston ether for or aganst a pont of vew when one does not know just what t s that consttutes that pont of vew. The authors of the letter nsst that SDS tres to "appeal to emotons rather than present the facts." But certanly SDS has done a great deal of researchng and nvestgaton. And that SDS s cognzant of the horror of war and the mmoralty of the present war n Vetnam and s attemptng to make others aware of these emotons seems to me n no way objectonable. One begns to wonder f the authors are not more ntrgued by numbers than by human bengs. Leonard Robbns encourage others t engage n To the Edtor: them. At any rate, t should be ponted out that those who burn For those students who dd not ther draftcards and refuse to be see the two flms on Vetnam, nducted nto the armed forces, "Tme of the Locust" and "Vetnam, Land of Fre", whch were as well as others who engage n other forms of protest, do so not attended by over 250 students and wth crmnal ntent but because faculty members, would lke to they feel ncapable of cncentously cooperatng, wth the ly source of nformaton so far comment on them snce ther on,1wgwx W, no panacea or omnscently nvolved cult guaranteed to cure all the lls of the unversty system, but t does make an attempt at elmnatng some of the anbguty. t s more of a catalyst whch, when added to correct amounts of partcpaton from all concerned, may precptate a very satsfactory communty, academcally and socally. Snce Stony Brook s nts embryonc stages t does not have the ntrnsc stablty of many other schools and t wll requre a metabolc precson of balance to functon durng these next few years of almost cancerous growth rates. ts success depends on partcpaton and coordnaton whch may be afforded to an extent by the resdent college proposal. The plan, or prt of t, s not. new. t was ntated accordng to smlar progras already functonng.at Yale, eharvard, Toronto, Mchgan State and Oaland unm verstes. Our plan s unque n that t makes rather extensve provsons to rt not only wanted to see ncorporated nto the plan. General gudelnes were set up by a rules commttee, comprsed of representatves of all concerned and the results were compled and nformally ntroduced at a group meetng. %he student representatves were asked to submt lsts of preferred faculty for the poston of master. The lsts were submtted to the Master Selecton Commttee and after consderaton and a great deal of delberaton, masters were assgned to each resdent college. Next, lsts of faculty assocates were conmpled by the masters and the legslatve bodes of the colleges. These lsts are pendng at ths tme. Graduate students wll be approached drectly by the colleges and wll be ncorporated by ther own volton. We are now n the process of organzng programs n each college that wll ffuncton durng ths semester. Snce t s just gettng underway, ths next semester wll be prmarly expermental n nature, to test the feasblty and the faculty and the _degate students, cojmumuty represet value of the suggested proposals. tves and unae most oter clege plans, freshman. tas been average populaton of two hun Snce each college; wth an n a process of. fornudlat l snce dred, wll be generatng ts own early last fall, when onntory programs and ntatng ts personal defnton of the plan, a wde legslatures facuty, admntrav ton, graduate stdts and commuters were ased to submt sug The mportant thng s that each range of deas should develop gestons and ropoeals for what wll be able to meet the needs of they, as groups or ndvduals, Contnued on Page 11 s from the "rght" element of our school. (The Statesman ddn't bother to send a reporter.) The flms were made for the Natonal Lberaton Front of South Vetnam n conjuncton wth the Amercan.Frends Servce Commttee (Quakers) by Japanese, Vetnamese and French camera crews and ncluded excerpts from Lyndon Johnson's speeches as well as scenes shot by UP news servce and other sources. These flms have been shown all over the U.S. and were recently shown n New York by the Angry Arts commttee, a group of artsts, muscans, wrt. ers and actors who are aganst the war n Vetnam. The purpose n showng the flms was, n fact, not to present any S.D.St "lne" on the war, but only to a see another pont of vew, one accepted by many of our European alles. To satsfy Hans Kugler and the gang (and ourselves), we are showng a U.S. Army flm on Vetnam operatons later ths month, whch wll gve us the "facts" on the war. n addton, we plan to show flms by Jules Feffer, Harry Belefonte and otd er antwar flms. As far as the statement that "S.D.S. s an extremely leftt group", thank Hans for the complment but only wsh t were true. Leonard Shames Who Controls COCA To the Edtor: T want to know what knd of controls the students n ths Unversty have over the servces whch they receve through payment of a Student Actvtes fee The qualty and quantty of flms beng presented to us by COCA, for example, have mproved steadly over the three years 've been here. Free, good moves every weekend are the type of thng whch are apprecated by most students. But not, however n a stuaton where the students are made to stand n a hallway for at least an extra half hour because a move was announced to be shown at 11:00 when t was actually shown at 11:30 or. 11:45, and not when another student can get up and by "rght" of hs poston as a projectoroperator threaten to stop the flm f everyone sn't quet. What rght does he have to tell a group of students watng to see a move that they wll have to, be quet or he won't show the flm? He's not dong ths out of the goodness of hs heart; he's; gettng pad for sttng or standng there on Frday nghts and runnng a projector. We pay to see these moves; he has no rght to mv pose hs condtons on 250 other students; and he has even less rght to stage a temper tantrm and walk out of the audtorum wth reels of flm. There were approxmately 250 students n the Physcs lecture hall who had wated at least a half hour to see "Darng".' We came to see the move and go home, not to st completely quetly through a short ths projector Contnued on Page 11

11 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 By Mke Goldsten As the Natonal Basketball Assocaton season draws to a close, t appears that the Phladelpha 76's and the San Francsco Warrors wll fnsh the year atop ther respectve dvsons. These two teams, along wth the Boston Celtcs, have been provdng the major nterest throughout the season. The bg story n the N.B.A. ths year would have to be the success of the Phladelpha 76's. Havng lost but ten of the more than 60 games they have played, Phladelpha!Phladelpha has led the N.B.A.'s Eastern Dvson snce.the frst week of the season. Playng at a record break. ng pace, the 76's are becomng the most successful team n the long hstory of professonal sports.. Phladelpha, amng for ts second consecutve dvsonal champonshp, s led by Wlt Chamberlan. Playng more, scorng less, yet mprovng on hs overall talents, Chamberlan s clearly the hub of the pha Pha 'attack. Wth Hal Greer, Chet Walker, Luke Jack Phladel ^son, and Wally Jones also startng, the 76's seem capable of wnnng the N.B.A. champonshp ths year. The most surprsng team n the N.B.A., however, s the San Francsco Warrors. Fnshng last n the Western Dvson just two years ago, the Warrors have clmbed to the top of ther dvson. The only team playng over.500 ball n the West, San Francsco's sud,den,oen success can be attrbuted to the emergence of Rck Barry as a superstar. Barry, who came out of the Unversty of Mam, s now playng hs second season n n the N.B.A. Averagng 26 ponts a game a year ago, he has now upped that to over 36 ponts and s clearly the backbone n San Francsco's offense. Lghtly regarded as the season began, the rapd rse of the Warrors s undoubtedly the surprse story n the N.B.A. ths year. Although these two teams appear lkely to wn ther the~r dvsonal champonshps, one cannot overlook the Boston Celtcs. Whle tralng Phladelpha n the league standngs, Boston always manages to come through wth the bg game when needed. Led by playercoach Bll bell,.tell,, the Celtcs are tryng to defend the champonshp whch they have won the past nne years. t wll be Rusmore mome dffcult ths year but the Celtcs stll have the players to d do o t. Although there are 10 teams n the N.B.A., few of the remanng teams have the talent to match Phladelpha, Boston, or San Francsco. Wth the playoffs just a lttle more than a month away, t appears that these three teams wll battle t out for the N.B.A. champonshp. or team, and we wll submt the awarded to the wnnng school or team, and we wll submt the Letters names of the wnners to the Tolken Journal, the offcal magazne of the Tolken Socety of Contnued from Page 10 operator nssted we should see, Amerca. Of course, the satsfacton of wnnng wll be greater especally 45 mnutes after we than any award we could offer. We hope to hear from you soon. expected the feature to start, and not to be told what to do and how to act durng a performance by someone who has no rght to mpose condtons on us. We pay for those moves; he's not dong fs any bg favors by showng them to us. He made some comw ent to the audence lke, '.You're actng lke you're enttled to ths!" Aren't we? Kathy Tynan Tol en Contest To the Edtor: The J.R.R. Tolken Club of the State Unversty of New York at Stony Brook would lke to take Ns opportunty to nvte all nterested students of your school to take part n our frst ntercollegate J.R.R. Tolken Contest. We would lke to get as many teams from as many schools n {he New York area as possble to partcpate. The contest wll be rru (we hope) somethng lke a trva contest, but all questons wwll be about Tolken and hs 4yorks. We plan to hold ths contest near the begnnng of March. There wll be a small prze letters of n Please address all qury, etc., to SusanMyra Kramer Box 76 Dorm H Wll all Chose who are nterested please try to contact us as soon as possble. We must bear from you before February 20. f you would lke to be on our team call ahnank you. S.A.B. PRESENTS THE JEFFERSON ARPLANE AND THE DALY FLASH SAT., FEB. 18 AT 8:30 P.M. SPOTlGHT: PHLCHN A chat wth varsty swmmers Wally Bunyea and Rocky Cohen was expected to yeld some of ther personal trats, but what was not expected was the overwhelmnng exhuberane of the two athletes for te success of ther team. n a sport where ndvdual performance s usually stressed, t s an experence to hear about and see the true meanng of that of that often used de corps". term "esprt Rocky has been wth the Varsty ever snce ts begnnng last year. Thus he was ready to feld the queston, "What's the dfference between Stony Brook's COLLEGE PLAN Contnued from Page 10 ts partcular populaton, somethng that would be dffcult n a total campus populaton. There are seven colleges now, and there wll be ten more next year, so consderaton s beng gven to some coordnatng body, perhaps at a legslatve level. The structure of the college s comprsed agan of a number of. elements. These elements nclude a master, faculty assocates, grad students and undergraduates represented by the legslatures of the respectve colleges. They wl be workng to create a more cultural ntellectual and socally rewardng atmosphere. The role of the master s one of coordnaton and organzaton, rather than N oton as hs ttle mples. He wll be aware of the workngs of the unversty accordng to the handbook and be avalable for counsel and advce. The faculty assocates and graduate students wll be assstng hm and the students n any way that they can, prmarly n helpng to organze and set tp the proposals that have been made to date. These proposals nclude lecture seres, nformal bull sessons, musc performances, art shows, hobby rooms wth the necessary facltes, ntramural athletcs, coffees, teas, forums, n short, functons of nterest. Contact wth faculty members outsde the classroom s an mportant purpose of the college plan. Wthout the lmfrst team (07) and ths year's team that has caught on to the wnnng sprt?" "Last year we had a few swmmers who were very good and cod. take a frst place. The trouble, though, was that we couldn't take the second or thrd spots. Ths year we're takng those second and thrd postons and the frst places much more often. Ths year each of us wants to try for better tmes because every man on the team eares about the team's performanee," he sad. Wally expressed hs feelngs ths way: "Whenever sm wth John (team cocaptan), t "psych' hm up. TOs causes hm to try to do better. He psych) me up also and you naturally want to put out. There's competton among ourselves whch helps us." The team's success s very dependent upon these two swmmers. Rocky has greatly mproved hs performance snce hs frst year of competton. Rocky has already set a team record n the 100yard freestyle wth a tme of 13:40.8 n a meet aganst Brooklyn College. Rocky s the most consstent performer n the.. e N ts ofcasromadofe ts of classroom and offce hours and wthout the nhbtons stemmng from socal separaton and the stgma of apple polshng (a euphemsm for a more commonly used term), the possbltes of betterng teachng methods and learnng more about topcs of perhaps more nterest than the ones on the currcular level are great. There are provsons for faculty members eventually lvng n the dorms and even a possblty of a freshman tutorng servce to elmnate some of the freshman's academc and Englsh Composton problems. Some of the more sgnfcant aspects of the Stony Brook College Plan n partcular nue an ntegraton of the ty at large,.e. outsde thea p Contrbut sts, wrfters and cvc leaders along wth nterested organzatons wll be nvted to augment the talents of o the n campus faculty. Campus servce groups, ntated by mm of the cdeges wll n turn be worng wth local hosdas and nttutons. One of the more radcal proposal s nclude to AM more nto the unversty's extracurrcular actvtes. There are many actvtes that exclude P the omuter because of schedule problems, beng late at nght, or other tmes that he may fnd dffcult. Snce many commuters are not omuters. by choce, but by necessty, due to resdent overcrowdng, they should be gven an opportunty to partcpa te n poltys e functons to a greater extent, snce they support them. There s the possblty of arrangng overnght sleepng quarters Aa a token charge. The cost of the college plan at or PAGE 1 Swmmers Bunyea and Cohen no0 500and 1,000yard freestyle, a gmueng longdstance race. Wally says of Rocky, "He's a real crowd pleaser." Wally refers to Rocky's dramatc comefrombehnd fnshes. n one race, Rocky won a race by edgng out hs opponent by three feet. Rocky hals from Sheepshead Hgh where he swam for the Varsty. Wally s probably the most welcome addton to ths year's Varsty. n ths hs frst year of collegate competton, 'Wally cad be counted on to place frst or second n the 50 yard freestyle. Wally kddngly refers to hs race as the "glamour race". He competes also n the 100yard freestyle and 40yard relay. A graduate of Curts Hgh School, Contnued on Page 12 ths pont s beg absorbed almhost entrely by the state. am assumng that, snce most of the programs are drectly benefcal to the students themselves, we wll be supportng, va student actvty funds, a proportonate part of the cost next year. Snce the colleges as resdence halls are our home and the centers of socal actvty t seems only rght that a substantal porton of fnancal support should be allocated to ncrease the rather mnmal amount of actvty at ths level. Thbs wll requre a great deal of cooperaton wth the Student Actvtes Board whch has done an excellent job of provdng actvtes durng xhs past semeser. The facutlty dm p a a d thtse ft s rexohbe fo supportngne fac* asscat wll be ubse by t state. here s aho a eft _ ty of ouatde a. support. The ollege pl tnwase re cently dby Chaot Waad, (fon r Dean of Ome UWverst of Chcago) d a vce psd e f the POW fetups daton. Dr. Wa d seemed n!* pressed wth or stated that the Ford Fo s nterested n they ell the "61cuttng edge patof Pts term whch mg wen be attrbutable to the Stony 1roo college plan. r ere w Mae be h Hoto about the college plan, especally durng the next few weeks. tnkk that t may very well be able to str Poeta the that has settled nto many stde and at (e very least should be gven a chance to develop. f the students really gve t a try, t could be the best opportunty for freedom of expresson that any of us wll ever experence.

12 PAGE 12 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967 Squashmen Eke to 12 Patrots Dump Brooklyn Poly 8154 _ ^ * Ad ^ AARON_ t was a pan n the neck for n r the Engneers of Brooklyn Poly Ths past Frday, n the frst to get here last Frday nght on home squash match n Stony account of the snow and the Patrots Brook hstory, the Red Tde swept by Wagner College 81. of Stony Brook made t a bgger pan n the neck to get out of here. The Patrots playng Joe Van Denburg gave Stony wthout Ted Eppensten, who s Brook a 10 lead as he defeated awatng the result of an ncomplete mark, ran over the En Krs Kefer, 1511, 156, Bob Folman was n top form as he gneers, Coach Herb Brown came from behnd to defeat Ed cted every player for pullng hs Chrstenen, 31. Norm Rapno own weght, gettng outstandng dd lkewse to gve the Patrots performances from Mark Krschner and reserve Alan a 30 advantage. Epsten. Coach Snder's fnd of the season, Ed Wess, defeated Larry Wunderle, 158, 159, 159. Bob Dulman battled hard to defeat Rck Boll, 31, to clnch the vctory for Stony Brook. Bob Wttmer, Arte Bregman, and Jay Solnck garnered the other three wns, whle Ken Male dropped three straght. The followng afternoon the Patrots dropped a dsappontng 81 contest to Adelph Unversty. Ths was the Pats' frst home loss of the season. Arte Bregman was the only vctor for the Red Tde as he captured a hardfought 32 vctory. After wnnng, 1511, he lost, He then traded 1511 decsons wth Greg Hanz. n the rubber match, Bregman outlasted the Panther, n some of the other close contests, Bob Folman and Bob Dulman dropped 32 decsons. Folman wort the frst easly, 159 n the most exctng match of the afternoon. He then proceeded to blow an early lead and lost the second, He had trouble wrappng up the thrd game, but a low forehand slam clnched the 1513 vctory. The fourth game was a rerun of the second, as Folman lost, Blly Berkowtz outlasted Folman n the decdng game, The Patrots, vsbly tred from the prevous afternoon, were not n top form, whle Adelph seemed muchmproved over the last The second half was the same as the frst and Coach Brown was able to clear hs bench. Mke Santol scored eght ponts, all n the second half. Krschner took hgh pont honors for bothteams fnshng wth 19. Epsten fnshed wth 15 ponts and seven rebounds. Hgh pont men for Brooklyn Poly were Jm Struk wth 15 and Abe Wetz wth 14. Hgh rebounder n the game was Charle Anderson wth 11. The Patrots as a team ted ther assst record of 22, whch was set The game started off slowly last week at Oneonta. Mandel had sx asssts and Bll wth the score ted at 22 after three and a half mnutes. A jump Stokes had three. shot by Krschner started Stony The Patrots next game s tonght aganst Queens College at Brook on ts way. Led by the shootng of Krschner and the passng of Jack Mandel, the Patrots contnued to roll along. (Photo by K. Sobel) Mark had 16 ponts n the half Ed Wess slams nto opponent on eght feld goals. Mandel had durng match. fve asssts and sx ponts n the The Stony Brook freshmen, half. Wth Eppensten out, the mnus the servces of Kenny tme, when the Panthers defeated the Red Tde, 54. over by Anderson, Krschner, romped over Long sland Tech, lack of reboundng was taken Glassburg and Tom Archbald, The most encouragng note of Schffer and Epsten. Anderson Tech, obvously outclassed, both days was the relatvely and Krschner each had seven. should not even have been on large turnout. Stony Brook s Epsten dd a great job under the same court. They were almost powerless to score and now 35. the boards whle scorng seven f By MARSHALL GREEN The Stony Brook swmmng team came up wth an mpressve 6241 wn aganst Brooklyn Polytechnc nsttute on February 10. Stony Brook won nne of the twelve events. The followng nght, the swmmng team was beaten 7430 by a surprsngly strong Howard Unversty team. Both meets were held at Stony Brook. Stony Brook got off to a fne start aganst Brooklyn Poly as they won the 400 yard medley relay by more than four laps. Ths put Stony Brook ahead by a score of 7 0. Stony Brook ncreased ts lead to 133 by vrtue of Rocky Cohen's frst place fnsh n the 1000 yard freestyle and Fred Brusten's thrd place (phwoto ty J. El;hs) Doug fennck s dong an nward dve, back poston aganst Howard, last Saturday. Doug took second place. showng. John Robertson and Mke Levnson then fnshed 12 n the 200 yard freestyle. That trumph, coupled wth Wally Bunyea's frst place fnsh and Roger Fluhr's thrd place fnsh n the 50 yard freestyle, gave Stony Brook a 277 lead. Arnold Pulver then won the 200 yard ndvdual medley but was dsqualfed and Brooklyn was able to make up eght ponts. Freshman Mark Smms, swmmng unoffcally, actually came n frst. n the dvng competton, dver Doug Hennck won for the frst tme ths season. mmedately after that, cocaptan John Robertson took hs second frstplace as he won the 200 yard butterfly. Ken Shapro came n thrd. n the 100 yard freestyle Mke Levnson came n frst ahead of teammate Wally Bunyea to further ncrease the Stony Brook lead. n the 200 yard backstroke, Paul Epsten and Fred Lfshey pcked up eght ponts by fnshng 12. Rocky Cohen pcked up hs second frstplace fnsh as he won the 500 yard freestyle. Roger Fluhr fnshed second n the 200 yard breaststroke. The relay team lost the 400 yard relay but by then the score was out of reach and the fnal score was Stony Brook 62 and Brooklyn Poly 41. The next meet, aganst Howard Unversty, was qute a dfferent story as Stony Brook went down to a 7430 defeat. John Robertson could manage the team's only frstplace fnsh, that beng n the 200 yard freestyle, as compared to the nne frsts aganst Brooklyn Poly. From the ntal loss n the 400 yard medley relay to the fnal loss n the 400 yard relay. Stony Brook was contnually behnd. After the 400 yard medley relay, Rocky Cohen fnshed second n the 1000 yard freestyle. John Robertson then won the 200 yard freestyle as he just touched out the Howard swmmer. After ths, t was all downhll. Wally Bunyea had the odd dstncton of breakng the team record n the 50 yard freestyle wth a tme of :24.3, even though he lost the event and fnshed second. n the 200 yard ndvdual medley, Paul Epsten came n seconds ahead of Arnold Pulver, who came n thrd. n the next sx events, Stony Brook placed a man second n each event except for the 200 yard backstroke where Arnold Pulver came n thrd. t was Doug Hennck second n the dvng, John Robertson second n the 200 yard butterfly and Mke Levnson second n the 100 yard freestyle, wth Wally Bunyea comng n thrd. Pulver fnshed thrd n the 200 yard backstroke and Rocky Cohen and Roger Fluhr came n second n the 500 yard freestyle and the 200 yard breaststroke respectvely. The relay team lost the 400 yard relay and the fnal score was The swmmng team wll fnsh out ts 1967 season wth two away games, the frst aganst Fort Schuyler on February 17 and the second aganst Hunter on February 21. Spotlght Contnued from Page 11 he was the captan of the school's varsty swm team. These athletes are part of a team. The team's success depends on the team's performance. One pont Wally and Rocky agreed upon whch wll nsure the team of a successful campagn s: "We respect the Coach. We always wll want to put out for hlm." ho1 has yet to wn a Knckebock( er Conference game ths. season, w7ll be much.. tougher wth the return of 6'5" center Larry Zolot. Stony Brook wll have t rough f Eppensten s unable to play. Ted was the team's hgh scorer averagng 19 ponts a game and rebounder wth 13 a game. Eppensten also leads the team n asssts wth 31. The only two departments n whch Ted doesn't lead are re. coveres and blocked shots. Krschner leads n recoveres wth 24 and Larry Hrschenbaum leads the team n blocked shots wth 16. 1* * m MARC AARON ponts n the half. Dave Schffer Queens. Queens, wl had sx rebounds. nuhne *leebu Swmmers Splt Meets For 37 Mark Stony trook s now 57, 22 n the Conference. Brooklyn Poly s 04 n the conference and 010 on the season. Frosh Romp 8327 Coach Koerner had kept the frst team n for a longer tme, the score mght have topped 100. One thng must be remembered though, Long sland has a very nexperenced team, even more so than the Patrots. The real test for the team wll come today when the team faces Queens. The game started slowly wth nether team able to fnd the range. Rch Greenfeld opened the game's scorng wth two from the floor. He quckly ncreased ths openng lead to 7 as he and Roger Pfeffer kept pourng on the ponts. Where these two left off, Steve Krener and Gerry Glassburg pcked up. Krener and Glassburg, the half's hgh scorers wth ten and twelve ponts respectvely really opened up the gap. Wth about 11 mnutes to go the score stood Glassburg then took charge and scored 10 ponts n the space of 2 1/2 mnutes. He sank foul shots, outsde jumpers and layups, At ths pont wth the score 35 5, substtutes began to pour n. Ths, however, dd not stop the Patrots' scorng. They contnued to ncrease ther lead wth Rosenfeld, Warren, Grant, and Jacobs takng up the slack. All ths tme Tech was scorng sporadcally, mostly on foul shots. They were led by Bob Kent, who had 9 ponts. At the end of the frst half, the score was Stony Brook 51, Long sland Tech 16. The second half proceeded almost exactly lke the frst wth Coach Koerner agan clearng the bench. To keep the scorng down, no fast breaks were allowed, but even so the freshman contnued to pour on the ponts. Al Jacobs led the assault wth 10 ponts. He was helped along by Bruce Rosenfeld and Steve Krener. Agan, Tech seemed powerless to do anythng. The Patrots played tght defense stealng the hall almost at wll. The fnal score, 8329 left nothng to be desred. The hgh scorers of Stony Brook were Steve Krener and Gerry Glassburg wth 17 ponts apece. One fnal note f there are any freshmen wth organzed basketball experence, who would stll lke to plav for the team, please report to Mr. Koerner at Mr. Brown's offce n the (\ym.

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