the montclarion, september 14, 1972

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Montclair State University Montclair State University Montclair State University Digital Montclair State University Digital Commons Commons The Montclarion Student Newspapers 9-14-1972 The Montclarion, September 14, 1972 The Montclarion, September 14, 1972 The Montclarion Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion Recommended Citation Recommended Citation The Montclarion, "The Montclarion, September 14, 1972" (1972). The Montclarion. 187. https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion/187 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Montclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected].

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Montclair State University Montclair State University

Montclair State University Digital Montclair State University Digital

Commons Commons

The Montclarion Student Newspapers

9-14-1972

The Montclarion, September 14, 1972 The Montclarion, September 14, 1972

The Montclarion

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion

Recommended Citation Recommended Citation The Montclarion, "The Montclarion, September 14, 1972" (1972). The Montclarion. 187. https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/montclarion/187

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Montclair State University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Montclarion by an authorized administrator of Montclair State University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected].

r

VIVI ont clarionVol. 47, No. 3 ______________ Montclair, N.J. 07043__________________________________________________Sgpf. 14, 1972 ^

Garden Complex Under StudyBy Carol GiordanoStaff Writer

M o n t c l a i r S tate ' s planned garden apartment complex in Little Falls is

currently under study to determine if it is "fiscally feasible,” according to V i n c e n t Ca lab rese , vice-president of business

and finance. But he was optimistic as he added, "I see no reason why the apartments can't be built."

The apartments, to be

Staff Photo by Guy Ball.

built on a 10-acre tract on Clove Rd., will house 744 students, said Jerome Quinn, facilities director. He noted t ha t cost estimates are due this week. Calabrese said that some of the apartments should be ready by September 1973 and that their cost for students will be "com pe titive with d o r m pr i ces . " MSC d o r m i t o r y costs per s e m e s t e r t o t a l approximately $600.

MSC had previously i n t e n d e d t o b u y apartments in Little Falls but town officials opposed the purchase because it would have meant a loss of about $250,000 in tax revenue.

Quinn explained that new apartments will be very similar to those at Stockton and Ramapo State Colleges. He said t h e y w i l l be f u l l y

f u r n i s h e d a n d air-conditioned, with all utilities, except telephone service, included in the rent. Parking space will also be provided.

"The area where the apartments will be built is heavily wooded," Quinn said, "and we will be able to save most of them." He noted that the college's architects, Mahoney and Zvosek, were successful in saving the trees at the RSC and SSC apartments.

Each of the 186 2-bedroom apartments will house f o u r students, Q u i n n s a i d . T h e apar tments w i l l also include a kitchen and living room.

Calabrese said that the complex w ill be owned by the N J Educational Facilities Authority but leased and run by the college.

\

Voter Signup

Set for Thurs.Students who have failed to register or who have

just turned eighteen will have one more opportunity to register on Thurs., Sept. 21, in time for November's presidential elections.

Personnel from the office of the Commissioner of Registration and Superintendent of Elections of Essex County will be located in the lobby of College Hall from 11 am to 5 pm.

Any students from out of Essex County who are living on-campus or in off-campus housing and who are not previously registered are eligible. Students living in Grace Freeman and Chapin halls may register and vote in Essex County while these living in Bohn Hall may register and vote in Passaic County.

Students living away from home who have already registered in their home counties must vote by absentee ballot.

The final date to register for the November election is Wed., Sept. 28.

_________ JGARDEN COMPLEX-blueprints outline the proposed student housing planned for Clove Rd.

SGAElections

Petitions for candidates for the 26 vacant seats in the S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t Association legislature '.aid the freshman class officers will be available in the SGA office, fourth floor. Student Center, on Fri., Sept. 15.

The petitions must be returned to the same office by Wed., Sept. 20 at 4 pm to be eligible for the Tues., Sept. 26 elections. A cumulative average of 2.25 is the only requirement for candidates.

The vacant seats in the legislature are:Blology-lBusiness Admlnistration-2Business Education-2Chemistry-1Cl assies-1English-3Fine Arts-2French-1German/Slavic-1Industrial Education and Technology-2 Music-1Philosophy and Rellgion-1 Physics/Earth Science-1 Speech Pathology-1 Speech and Theater-1 Uncommitted-2Schools:Humanities-1Fine and Performing Arts-1

2. MON TCLA RION/Thurs., Sept 14, 1972.

Staff Photo by Guy Ball.REYKJAVIK ON THE LAW N-MSC students Bryan Majkrzak (I.) and Jane Heins (r.) play their own version of the Boris Spassky-Bobby Fisher chess championship.

(Another Lot

BOSS Becomes BSCU To Make 'Success Reality’

500 SpacesA new 500 car parking lot is

slated to be completed on Sept. 20 in an effort to facilitate the increasing numbers of students and cars at Montclair State.

The new lot has been constructed at a cost of a p p r o x i m a t e l y $ 8 0 ,0 0 0 , according to Vincent Calabrese, vice-president of business and finance.

In a release from his office, Calabrese said that the parking situation was expected to be critical during the first few days of school. This situation was due to "an initial surge of abnormal traffic," he explained. On the first days of school almost every student is on campus either to go to class, register for courses o r m e e t t h e i r friends.

STUDENT NEEDS ride. West Orange area. Call 731-1860.SECRETARY. Assistant to Editor, part-time to fit your class schedule. Call Mr. Berkley, 256-8698.D IA M O N D E N G A G E M E N T & W E D D IN G RINGS. 3,000 ring selections in all styles at 50% discount to students, staff, and faculty. Buy direct from leading manufacturer and SAVE! 1/2 carat $179, 3/4 carat only $299. For free color folder wrire: Box 42, Fanwood, N.J. 07023.

FREEComplete listing of magazine subscriptions at discount rates. Write:GIFT TREE, College Dept. Bx. 5922, Grand Central Sta. New York, N.Y. 10017

Volunteers are needed to perform in Red Cross Hospital Shows. Whether or not you are talented, we need you! Help others! For more Information call John Kalinowski at (201) 288-9089.

Attendance is good and, as a result, the amount of traffic is at a peak during this period.

A 120 car lot has also been completed in the lower quarry, according to the release. Future i m p r o v e m e n t s i n c l u d e repavement of campus roads, a new walk and steps in the quarry areas and new sidewalks and curbs around Stone Hall. The parking lot behind Webster Hall is also scheduled to be improved.

Inspite of the improvements and the anticipated decrease in attendance, Calabrese said that the parking situation will remain "very tight” in the coming school year.

The Black Organization for Success in Society (BOSS) is now called the Black Student Cooperative Union (BSCU)-but the organization members are hoping the change won't be in name only.

Karen Thompson, sophomore speech and theater major, is in charge -of the new revitalized organization.

"BOSS served the purpose of bringing black culture to the college," she said, explaining t h a t i t gave the black com m unity an organization something with which to relate.

THE BSCU is planning to

Speech and Hearing grad student seeks apartment and roommate(s). Call Harry Katz 481-3380 between 6-10 pm, nightly.

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continue that function but on a h i g h e r level. " O u r new organization will be making success a reality," Thompson said.

Photography workshops, a creative writing project and a newspaper are being considered by the group according to Thompson.

One thrust of the new organization is to acquaint and encourage participation in the various exist ing Class 1 organizations by the black community.

The BSCU will also continue offering concerts and programs

w h i c h p r o v e d p op u la r , Thompson said, although there may be a charge for non-college persons.

TERM PAPERSSend for your descriptive, up-to-date, 128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300 quality termpapers Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.

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/ M O N T C L A R IO N --------- NNew Jersey’s Leading Collegiate Weekly

Bill Gibson Carla Capizzi

Kathy Blumenstock Joan Miketzuk

Joanne Surowicz James D. Hile

Carol Giordano Guy Ball

Carol Anne Sakowitz Lou Romano Miguel Mena

Michael F.X. Grieco Men of APO

arts editor assignment editor copy editors

editorial assistant editorial page editor layout editor photography editor sports editor advertising manager business manager editorial consultant circulation

The MONTCLARION is published weekly throughout the academic year, except during examination, vacation and innovative periods, by the Student Government Association, Inc., of Montclair State College, Valley road at Normal avenue, Upper Montclair, N J 07043. Telephone: (201) 893-5169.

Advertising rates upon request. Known office of publication: Upper Montclair, N J 07043.

The M ONTCLARION is a member of the New Jersey Collegiate Press Association and has twice won the All-American rating in the Associated Collegiate Press Competition.

The editorial opinions expressed represent those of the editor-in-chief.V_____________ J

MON TCL A RION/Thurs., Sept. 14, 1972. 3.

'O ld ’ Life Hall Getting New LookBy Joan MiketzukStaff Writer

Last year you might have bought some books and a felt-tipped marker there. This year the Life Hall bookstore is

By Carla CapizziStaff Writer

The renovation of Life Hall may have created a problem for faculty members. What was once the faculty dining room has been converted into a fine arts laboratory, leaving the faculty members with no private dining facilities.

So far, few of the faculty members have complained, according to Robert Derner, Fa cul ty Association head. However, he expects more complaints to come in once the novelty of dining in the new

being used as a classroom.Last year you might have

spent your spare time there playing cards with your friends. This year the card room on the lower level of Life Hall is being

STudent Center wears off. These instructors who have objected consider a faculty dining room "a working condition." Derner himself "likes the idea" of mingling with the students in the cafeteria.

POSSIBLE DEMAND

If Derner receives many c o m p l a i n t s , the Facul ty Associat ion wi l l ask the administration to provide them with a dining room at the college's expense. If that fails, he said, the association and the A m e r i c a n Federat ion of Teachers may include a faculty

subdivided into music practice rooms.

Last year you might have bought tickets to on-campus happenings or newspapers or candy there. This year the

dining room in their contract demands.

The faculty was not formally advised in advance of the dining room's demise, Derner stated. He heard about it last spring through a dining room employe who was worried about losing her job.

Derner said that initally there was some confusion over the creation of a new faculty dining room. Some faculty members, including himself, mistakenly thought they were to have exclusive use of the formal dining room in the Student Center.

Fishbowl houses the Office of International and Off-Campus Learning Programs.

All of these changes are part of the transition for Life Hall from student meeting center to classroom space, practice rooms and offices.

As a matter of fact, even some o f the offices have changed. The Faculty-Student Co-op is now the Office of Career Planning and Placement. The Office of the Director of Student Activities is now the Office of Student Housing.

These offices are located on the first floor, fronting the lounge area, on the south and north ends respectively.

Although the snack bar will remain open, according to Jerry Quinn, facilities director, its extension in the north end where extra table provided more space for lunchtime snackers, will be occupied by the Office of Women's Affairs.

The southeast corner of the cafeteria will be utilized by the English department's Writing Workshop, EOF tutoring and a dining area for the home economics department.

The remainder of the cafeterial will be available for student study space.

"Next year the cafeteria may re-open as we increase our enrollment," Quinn stated. He pointed out that because of this, those organizations occupying cafeteria space will be able to use it for the 1972-73 school year only.

The kitchen will remain inactive but intact in case the home economics department wishes to use the facilities, Quinn added.

The main lounge on the first floor and the alumni lounge on the second level will remain open and a meeting room will be opened on the second floor for students' use.

According to Quinn, the rooms occupied last year by the student organizations and publications will continue to house student organizations and publications will continue to house student clubs, although the former inhabitants of this floor have mo/ed to the new Student Center.

Despite the loss of TUB and Life Hall cafeteria, there are still three places on campus where students may purchase food; the Center cafeteria, the formal dining room on the second floor of the Center and the Life Hall snack bar.

Baird To SpeakIn CLUB Lecture

No More Faculty Cafe

Controversial birth control advocate Bill Baird is slated to speak on campus next week.Baird has championed the fight for "women's rights to control their own bodies" for several years. He has been jailed seven times for fighting for the rights of all people to birth control and abortion. In 1967 he risked a 10-year prison sentence by defying a Massachusetts law and giving non-prescription birth control foam to un unmarried 22-year-old women.

/ ----------------------U U I C D U O K ----------------------- \TODAY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14CLUB MEETING. General meeting at 4 pm, in fourth floor meeting room, Student Center.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15RALLY. Rally for Sen. George McGovern, with Jon Voight from "Midnight Cowboy," at noon,west patio of the Student Center. Another rally is scheduled for 8 pm in MemorialAuditorium featuring speakers, music and a showing of the film, "Milhouse."

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16BASEBALL. MSC vs. Lafayette College, noon at home.FOOTBALL. MSC vs. Kutztown State, 1 pm at home.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17BASEBALL. MSC vs. St. Peter's College, noon at home.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18M O VIE. C INA sponsors the classic documentary "Sixteen in Webster Groves" at 1 pm inAdmission free.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19MOVIE. CLUB sponsors "The Hospital" at 7 pm and 9:30 pm. Memorial Auditorium.Admission .75.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20MOVIE. CINA sponsors the classic documentary "Sixteen in Webster Grooves" at 1 pm inL-135. Admission free.COFFEE HOUSE At 8 pm in Life Hall.BASEBALL. MSC vs. Seton Hall at 3:30 pm, away.__________________ _______________ y

Baird founded the Parents' Aid Society, a non-profit birth control, abortion and narcotics center. He also is the directory of a Hempstead, Long Island birth control and abortion center which pledges to help any women regardless of age, marital status or religion. He has served as adviser on birth control to New Jersey legislators.

The CLUB-sponsored lecture is scheduled for Sept. 21 at 8 pm in Memorial Auditorium.

Jk flak, I m

MSC BusesShuttle Along

By Susan KellyStaff Writer

A campus shuttle bus will soon begin to provide relief to the many Montclair State students who have been forced by heavy student traffic to park their cars farther and farther away from campus.

The Student Government Association has purchased two 20-passenger vans to transport students to campus from the quarry parking lots and back. The service will not be a "car to classroom" service, according to commuter commission member Tom Barrett.

Barrett, a sophomore business administration major, explained that the purpose of the service is to bring the commuters onto campus from the parking areas.

A t a t o t a l c o s t o f approximately $ 10,000, the vans are "the biggest, most powerful and most dependable vehicles available for the service," Barrett said. The vans will be given to the college upon arrival and the college will pay the operating expenses.

V i n c e n t C a l a b r e s e , vice-president of business and finance, estimated that the shuttle service will cost the college approximately $15,000 in labor and maintenance costs.

The vans will be driven by members of the student security force.

The service will begin within two weeks, said Barrett. A tentative bus route has been devised with several centrally located stops. Students will not be picked up along the roads and the number of bus stops will be limited in order to get the students to class as quickly as possible.

Tentative bus stops include one or more quarry stops, as well as stops near the Student Center and the Math-Science building. The buses may also stop in front of College Hall to service that end of campus. C o m m u t e r C o m m i s s i o n co-chai rwoman Margueri te Banks stresses that the schedule is just tentative and will probably be changed in the first few months.

If the shuttle buses are successful after one year, a referendum will be put before the student body to determine if they will be willing to pay an increased parking fee to assume the large costs of the service. Calabrese explained that the present $10 parking fee just covers the maintenance costs of the existing lots and would not be enough to fund the shuttle.

f M O N T C L A R O NNew Jersey's Leading Collegiate Weekly

Voi. 47, No. 3 Montcldir, N.J. 07043 rhum., Sept. 14. 1972

M.J. Smith editor-in-chief Susan Kelly managing editor

How About Some Service?

'OH, OH . . . QUICK, LOOK INNOCENT!'

Registration and scheduling are essential for enrollment at Montclair State. It follows the administration of both areas should be as free from mismanagement as possible.

Normally there are some mistakes, but this year seemed to produce a bumper crop.

What happened this summer and fall in the areas of tuition payment and scheduling was nothing short of a fiasco.

To begin with, students were not properly informed of how or when to pay the first part of their tuition bill. Sure, there was a notice for payment in the fall master schedule book, but unless a magnifying glass was handy it could be very easily overlooked.

According to the schedule, students were to remit a payment of $100 by July 15 or forfeit their enrollment. No one said anything about a change of procedure so the vast majority of students were expecting notification in the mail— which was the previous policy.

It was bad enough when undergraduates didn’t receive schedules or the courses they wanted. But seniors who needed certain courses to graduate were feequently closed out. The result was monumental lines in front of the gym.

For the increased tuition students are payming, this isn’t exactly quality service. Indeed, it is no service at all.

We RememberWe remember an article in last semester’s

MONTCLARION in which Vincent Calabrese, MSC’s vice-president of business and finance, commented that Montclair has the best parking of any college on the East Coast.

Somehow that is very hard to believe.It is hard to believe when it is necessary to get to school

at 7:30 am in order to get a parking place.It is hard to believe when students have to thread their

way through endless lines of cars parked against every available inch of curb.

It is hard to believe when Keith Kauffman, director of safety and security, has to direct traffic every morning.

It’s just hard to believe.

Hang A Left-

It’s about time someone named the streets in this campus community. With the growing student population and mushrooming involvement with off-campus groups, it has become next to impossible to explain how to get anywhere on campus: “You come on campus—yes, the read by the gym. Come all the way up to where it branches. Go up the branch on the left—all the way up and then take the road on the right. It’s the one behind the Student Center.

“You don’t know what the Center looks like? Well, it’s this big white building . . . ”

Lynda Em ery

Prophesy Comes True“ I'm amazed that everyone at

Montclair State is so friendly. I had always heard that, well . . . ”

One freshman, who was a t t e n d i n g l a s t w e e k ’s orientation, left her sentence unfinished. But plenty of the new students have already verbalized their anticipated disappointment with Montclair State College as an academic and social institution.

T h u s , a self-fu lfilling prophesy about this college has been established in many student's minds even before they have attended a single class. “MONKEY STATE”

A number of freshmen enter this college with the attitude of, “ It was the only place I could afford,” and believe, “Monkey State is only a glorified high school.” To those new students I can only say that Montclair State will be only a glorified high school if the students continue to behave and react like high school students and if that is the attitude you take to your new institution of learning, then you are probably not yet sufficiently mature for high school, much less college.

Personally, 1 believe in this institution and because I do I am neither piqued nor dismayed by those who jeeringly refer to “Monkey State.” I only wish that those who view Montclair State in that manner could be put away in their own cages, far away from the rest of the monkeys. Perhaps then, students new to the campus would be forced to judge the school on what they themselves saw and heard and not on what a few malcontents promised would be true.WORST PLACE

But while 1 would condemn articles in the “alternative campus newspaper” which make statements such as “ . . . you’ll

soon find you’ve definitely chosen the worst place in the would to get an education . . . and nothing ever happens here...” I would also condemn this newspaper or any student, faculty or administrator who blatantly told you that it was a great college, suited to your every need.

Montclair State will prove to be something different to each person. To some, it will provide a successful and enjoyable

R eportage

Olympics

By Carol GiordanoStaff Writer

Once again the Olympic G a m e s were m arred by politics—but this time politics ended in tragedy.

The deaths of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches schocked and saddened all peace-loving men. Such senseless killings seem even more tragic in view of their setting—an athletic competition in which fairness, sportsmanship and decent patriotism should prevail. But the Olympics will never bring these things to mankind while they are used by outsiders to achieve other, less idealistic ends.

The Olympic arena offers a unique opportunity for men and women to compete on an individual and team basis. An Olympic victory is a matter of enormous national and personal pride. Poor judging or a lack of sportmanship is soon forgotten amid the glamour and pageantry of the Games but the 20th Olympaid will bear the memory

learning experience. To others, it will be a failure in almost every sense of the word.

Of course, 1 hope that each new student’s experience will be the former. But despite the outcome, my overriding concern is the way in which you will judge this institution. It should come entirely from your own head. If you form your own prejudices, you might be as pleasantly surprised as that first freshman was.

Marred

of the dead as long as there are those who deplore such violence.

Four years ago in Mexico City, the Olympics also faced po litica l turmoi l . Despite problems with the athletes themselves, the Games survived. And in 1972 after the killings, the Olympics went on. There could be no greater • tribute to the dead competitors than to continue what could have been the fulfillment of their own dreams. The United States and Russia, as expected, did extremely well. Record after record was broken in the water and on the track. For the first time in Olympic history, an athlete won seven gold medals.

But the 1972 Olympics will not be remembered for these accomplishments. What could have been an outstanding achievem ent fo r mankind became little more than an purposeless tragedy. It does seem to follow the prevailing pattern of our times.

MONTCLARION/Thurs., Sept 14, 1972. 5.

It’s Too Late For CariBy James D. HilcStaff Writer

Men in the control booth signaled directions to the moderator as the set lights warmed up. The candidate sat facing a battery of newsmen for the nat ion-wide broadcast. Cameras were ready. Thirty seconds to go.

Another form of lighting warmed the air around Pontiac,

Sin ¡III

Michigan. The sun was just rising above the home of Carl Merchant, an auto worker in the middle-class town.

The senator felt quite comfor table as he fielded questions from the amiable reporters. Ilis statements on Vietnam, tax reform and the campaign were as idealistic and naive as only George McGovern could make them.

Cari, Merchant’s teenage daughter, couldn’t have cared less about McGovern’s idealism as she held her father close. There wasn’t much time left-they would be there soon to take her away. The court order had said so.

It was still painfully difficult for Merchant to accept, lie had worked hard all his life, had obeyed all the laws. Yet today

federal marshals would come to take his child away because he was an unfit parent.

Was it unfit wanting your child to have a decent education in her own neighborhood? A federal judge thought so and Cari was to be taken from home a n d p l a c e d w i t h he r grandparents. All because her father refused to allow her bused to a high-crime area of the city.

The subject of forced busing came up.

McGovern answered quite smoothly, “Gentlemen, I don’t see any point to the furor about this issue, after all it only affects

3% of the school population.” Two cars pulled up in front

of the Merchant house. Four men got out.

“ My administration will exercise the dynamic leadership in backing court decisions President Nixon has n o t . .

One rang the bell.“ Busing should not be an

issue in the campaign . .The marshals entered.“ It is a useful tool to enforce

desegragation . . .”The order presented.“ Busing should not inflame

people . . .”Cari was gone.Guns Breed Guns

J .P . Cain

The Olympics—

Munich’s Beerhall

F.dward J. Bloustein, Rutgers University president, announced Friday that he may authorize the school’s security police to carry guns during night patrols.

So now carrying firearms may becom e s tandard in the academic community.

A college campus should be th e p e r f e c t s o c i e t y - - a community devoted to the ideals of learning, experimentation and the betterment of the human condition.

In a more realistic vein, it is easy to see why the Rutgers’ p o l i c e s h o u l d r e q u i r e firearms--the New Brunswick campus is located in a decaying city as is both the Camden and Newark campuses.

However, when Rutgers leads it has been the unfortunate tendancy for other state colleges to follow.

Clyde Ki n»

What we’ve known for so long as being the Black Organization for Success in Society, (BOSS) isn’t BOSS any longer. It is now the Black Student Cooperative Union, (BSCU). Aside from the range of name, which is only to defray from the old stigma of BOSS, there have been a number of other changes. One being the relocation of the offices in the new Student Center.

Today’s colleges are part of the modern environment, an environment which, if not more violent, is at least more openly violent than ever before.

Bloustein commented that it was the patrolmen themselves who requested the sidearms. The very idea of carrying weapons on campus should be an anathema to the policemen themselves if they are truly a part of the community.

Most campus security officers have not been trained as policemen, a situation that exists at both Rutgers and Montclair as well as most of the state colleges. There are really two classes of security-guards, who are relatively untrained in standard police procedure and campus police, who have passed the standard tests.

Bloustein has said that only campus police will be allowed to

foundation with the machinery which would be necessary in making a black organization function properly. For this I say right on to Karen Thompson.

The question now is, are the people ready to make it work? Will black students at Montclair State stand up with BSCU or will they continue to sit back and watch BSCU turn back into BOSS. Despite all the changes it

carry guns-but the question remains will the security guards demand them in time? They are of t en put into the same situations. It is logical to assume they will now want the same protection.UNARMED COP

It takes courage to be a cop wi thout a gun. When a policeman can pull a pistol, he comes to rely on it. He knows he holds the power of death in his hand. Yet, if he carries no sidearm, he has to depend on himself to enforce the law.

Guns breed guns-just as violence breeds violence. If a student knows the campus security force is armed and is still determined to commit a crime, chances are he will arm himself too.

Bloustein has said he won’t al low guns on “ rout ine patrols”--on!y at night.

is the black students who only can affect the real change.

And will the death weight which still exists in the high echelon of the organization, be the cause of the organization falling apart. Will disloyalty and rhetoric continue to destroy the progress of this organization, as it was allowed to destroy everything for BOSS. If so, then BSCU will also destroy itself.

Here it is.You could have made a hell

of a movie out of those Olympics. This year’s little sprint at the finale of summer was controversial, to say the least. The very least. “The Games of the Twentieth Olympiad” (and nobody but Howard Cosell could take that title seriously) were viewed by millions, but it’s still hard to believe that some of the things really happened.IN SHAPE

Aside from wondering where Cosell runs his mouth to get it in shape for the boxing coverage, Olympic fans got to spend lots of time wondering about other things. Can Bobby Fischer play chess as well as Mark Spitz can swim? Why did Dave Wottle wear that freaky hat? How come everybody said Cathy Rigby was going to be so great? Who really won the gold medal in basketball? When are they going to start the games again? And how did Erich Segal get out of the cornfield and into the Olympic stadium?

Then there were a couple of new events this year. You all saw that great exhibi t ion of beer-mug carrying at the Hofbrauhaus. Fourteen Mugs! Webster Hall has already started

training for the ’76 Olympics. After all, it’s never too soon to start-you only get to go around once in life, and you have to grab for all the gusto you can. Webster men are well known for grabbing gusto, among other things.

POLICEAnother new, less funny

addition to the game was “Guerilla Warfare” . You might have known the Arabs and the Israelis would be up there at the top, with the German police right behind. Seems like the German were third in about everything, didn’t it?

The judges and referees weren’t involved in making anyone come in third, though. They were impartial, because they w eren’t even paying attention. This was the first year that the judges played more games than the athletes: diving, gymnas t i c s , boxing and basketball.

At least there weren’t too many political protests by the competitors this year. We all know that wasn’t a real protest by Wayne Collet. He just didn’t have a clear conscience. The only trouble is, after those Olympics, nobody else really does either.

BOSS Is Dead

More important, the Black Organization has taken a new identity with a different purpose in mind. And that I think is dynamite.

RIGHT ON

K a r e n T h o m p s o n the president of the organization spent the ent i re summer re-organizing and redeveloping the office from which BSCU operates. Because of sister Karen, BSCU stands on a new

(gremlin fóiUaaeCOVIF'Pl NT, I'M COOL.-

I CJoA “TÍvkE o l TH E. WHOLE WOK-l D f

Gene TTtater

6 MONTCLARIONÎThurs . Sept 14, 1972.

New Magazines for the 'New Woman’By M. J. SmithStaff Writer

In "The Feminine Mystique," Betty Freidan wondered what intelligent woman would want to read about Edna St. Vincent Millay's cooking.

Yet for almost 40 years, intelligent women have found such articles abounding in the so-called "women's magazines."

Produced by men, perodicals like Good Housekeeping have relied on such "Kinder, Kuche, Kirche ' ' staples to keep themselves in print.

Sparked by the Women's Liberation Movement, a new crop of magazines have appeared on the newsstands in recent months with such varied titles as New Woman, Essence and "Ms."

New Woman, whose slogan is "the first magazine for the th ink ing wom an ," is the movement 's Cosmopolitan. Both magazines have remarkable similar covers--beauti ful ly made-up, impeccable coiffed women. In all fairness, it should be noted the Women covers are cropped at the neck while Cosmo has no such scruples. LEGAL COLUMN

While New Woman does have such basic features as a monthly column called "Know Your Rights" written by a woman lawyer, each issue is also

sprinkled with articles like "Things Your Husband Never Told You About Sex."

Essence is New Women's black sister magazine. Written "for today's black woman," the monthly is largly financed by a load from Chase Manhattan Bank wi th Hugh Hefner's Playboy owning 10% of thestock.

Although editor Marcia Ann Gillespie and most of the editorial staff are female,editorial director Gordon Parks ( " S h a f t " ) and all of thepublishing staff are male.

Essence, now over a yearold, considers the Women's Movement only incidental to its inception. However, it shows the movement's influence in such features as a series on birth control and an article in the September edition of how to start a cooperative daycare center.COLLECTOR'S ITEM

The Dec. 15 first edition of Ms. is now a collector's item. Originally financed by New York magazine, Ms. (the title used to indicate female as Mr. indicates male) is probably the onl y magazine publ ished primar i ly to promote the Women's Movement.

However, the creators of Ms., Elizabeth Forsling Harris and Gloria Steinem, have taken care

to ensure that their monthly will compete favorably with any o t h e r m a s s - d i s t ri but ion magazine.

Steinem, well known in the movement, is still editor and president. Harris, listed as publisher in the masthead, is a former vice-president of CRM, Inc., owners o1 Intellectual Digest and Psychology Today as well as the recently-acquired Saturday Review.

Ms. is perhaps the most esoteric of the new breed of magazines . Un l i ke other periodicals, Ms. includes historical articles on such early libbers as Victoria Woodhull, first woman candidate for the US Presidency.

Other unusual features of the September issue were a scathing article on the "wife and mother" orientation of Hollywood fan mags and "Mom, the Wolfman and Me," a juvenile novel

written by Norma Klein.Taking their role in the

liberation movement seriously, Ms. included a fairy tale, suitable for clipping, in the August issue. Centering on a little girl named G w e n d o l y n who " l i k e d geography," the story explains how Gwendolyn saved the prince from the dragon by "using her head."

Unlike New Woman whose ads consist mainly of plugs for perfume, lipsticks and feminine hygiene sprays, Ms. is screening out ads they feel are "insulting to women."LETTERS

An example of the comments Ms. is asking for can be found in this month's "Letters to Ms." column: "The two page ad placed by Leilani Rum is downright disgusting. I resent the condenscention that says 'You've probably got a recipie for scrambled eggs that's harder than this...What didn't you understand? The lime? The sugar?..., Read it again, sisters and ask the ad agency to come off it."

The new magazines have influenced each other-and the more established "homemaker" periodicals as well.

Over at the Ladies Home Journal, editor John Mack Carter seems to be waiting to see if the movement is a passing fad.

However, he has included author L e t t y C o t t i n Pogrebin's "Working Woman" column as a monthly feature.

McCal l 's , whose slogan trumpets "Right Now,” has one woman on its sixteen-member executive board.

P e r h a p s t h e m o s t "motherhood and apple pie" of them all is Good Housekeeping. O w n e d by t h e H e a rs t Corporation, the highest ranking woman on the staff is Mina White Mulvey, the assistant to the managing editor.

CONSUMER CHAMPWhile Good Housekeeping

has been known for years as the champion of consumerism, it has lagged behind considerably in most other areas.

The only feature that could be even vaguely considered contriversial was "Harvest of Shame." Written by a man, Joseph N. Bell, the article documented the plight of the migrant farm workers.

In the wake of the current rise in publishing and mailing costs, monthly magazines have been folding with astonishing regularity. It now remains to be seen if the new breed of women's monthlies can hold their own against their sister publications.

HELP WANTED

BOOKEEPERS: Class one work. Must be good with figures. Make your own hours, free erasers.

BUSINESS PEOPLE: Must have management talents, clear head and flair for organization. Grey flannel suit not necessary.

THOSE INTERESTED IN CURRICULUM: Needed for research into current academic trends. No experience necessary, will train.

APPLY: STUDENT GOVERNM ENT OFFICE

FOURTH FLOOR, STUDENT CENTER

893-4202

POLITICOS: Wanted to serve on committees and assist with legislative details. May travel. Must be willing to beat the hell out of the system.

PEOPLE WITH IDEAS: The crazier the better.

OR ANYTHING ELSE YOU WOULD LIKE TO DO. CHANCE FOR ADVANCEMENT. NO PAY BUT OFFERS EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCE AND SKILL DEVELOPMENT.

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MONTCLARION/Thurs., Sept. 14, 1972. 7.

time

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AthleticNotices

T h e M o n t c l a i r S t a t e Department of Athletics has released its swimming pool schedule beginning Mon., Sept. 11 to Sept. 30.

It will be available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 4 to 6 p m and from 7 to 9 p m , Wednesday, from 8 to 10 p m , Saturday, from 2 to 5 p m , and Sunday from 2 to 5 p m and 7 to 9 p m

Admission is open to faculty, staff and college students with identification cards. Children (under 18) of the faculty, staff, or students will be admitted only with an adult member of the family.

BasketballThere will be a meeting for all

JV and varsity basketball c a n d i d a t e s who haven' t participated before on Sept. 19 at 4 p m in Gym #2.

Fall TennisTennis registration will begin

on Mon., Sept. 18 for men's singles and doubles, women's singles and doubles and for mixed doubles.

Pick up an application at the Athletic Dept.

Touch FootballM e n ' s t o u c h fo o tb a l l

registrat ion will begin on Mon., Sept. 18 at 4 pm and end on Fri., Sept. 22.

Pick up an application at the Athletic Dept.

New RulesAll students must have MSC

Accident Insurance in order to participate in the intramural program. Proof of insurance will be necessary.

All students must have in their possession and ready to present their I D cards in order to participate.

New AssistantMSC appointed Barry Hennis

as Assistant Intramural Director to Hank Schmidt. Hennis graduated from the University of Alabama with a BS in physical education and earned his masters in PE from the University of Bridgeport.

Summer Lacrosse(Continued from Page 8)

alumnus cited lacrosse as "the per fect way to keep fit, p h y s i c a l l y a n d p s y ­ch o logica l ly - i t 's a more c o m p e t i t i v e o u t l e t for f rustrat ion than tennis or slow-pitch softball."

A good spirited contest may be the main objective, according to most players, but every team does like to see the score in its favor, as evidenced by the same k i n d o f ' ' s i d e l i n e quarterbacking" seen at any Saturday afternoon football game.

Al though Sparky Lyle's pitching arm and the pennant race dominated much of the nat ion's summertime sports conversation, lacrosse, at least for its fervent fans, should be around at least a few more summers.

M ontclarion^ yQ/ 47 /y0 3 Montclair, N.J. 07042 _____________________________________________Sept. 14, 1972

A LOOK BACK— Kutztown halfback Doug Dennison is tied up by MSC's Jerry Caputo in last year's season opener. MSC is hoping to echo that 25-20 win in tomorrow nigh f's game.

MSC’s Lacrosse Team

at ItDuring Summer

MSC Opens Fall Season

Sticking

Faster than an Olympic miler, more powerful than the New Yor k Rangers—no, not an athletic superman, but the New Jersey Lacrosse Club's summer teams. While most Montclair State students spent their free time during summer '72 en route to the shore, several members of Coach Al Jackson's f irst year lacrosse squad sharpened their skills and gained new insight into the sport via weekly games at Warinaco Park in Elizabeth.

Lacrosse, once associated only with Ivy League schools and often mistakenly referred to as a "sissy" sport, is rapidly changing its image. Gaining s u d d e n a t t e n t i o n in a competi t ion-crazed nation, lacrosse has been tagged "The fastest sport on two feet." MSC's team, young but enthusiastic, will attain varsity status this school year and judging from last season's performance, should take on the most experienced squads with ease.

Indian players Brian Loughlin and Bill Paldino, members of the summertime 'blue' squad and George Fabian and Craig Degnaro of the 'maroon' group, gathered with the rest of their teams throughout June and July, the contests providing more action than even a Yankees'

double-header. Frank Rotunda, lacrosse coach at Stevens Tech, directed the summer program, in its fourth year and served as player-coach for the maroon squad.

"Keeping in shape" was the primary reason for participation, claimed the MSC students as well as the other lacrosse players. As Loughlin, a junior pointed out, "Competition for our team will be a lot tougher this year-even though a guy may have started last season, an incoming freshman who played lacrosse in high school could

w L ... -M i

Bill LowingCross Country Co-Captain.

send him to the bench."S u m m e r lacrosse also

provided the Indian athletes with more varied experiences in the game, as Paldino made his debut as a goalie and Loughlin, usually a defender, started at midfield.

Other players in the summer league included several high school stickmen, a few Rutgers and Newark State students, and a surpr is ing number o f post-college family men who had played lacrosse during their school years. One Ohio Wesleyan

(Continued on Page 7)

The question now facing cross country coach George Horn and his harriers is: "Where do we go from here?"

Last year, led by captain Vic Mizzone and Kevin McGrath, MSC went undefeated in its 14 meets, a first for the team. It placed second in the New Jersey State College meet, following Princeton and edging Rutgers University. Mizzone also placed in the top 10 of the IC4A championships at Van Cortland Park in the Bronx.

Mizzone's absence on the squad this season presents a problem to Horn if he wants to

By Joan MiketzukSports Writer

It would be a fine script for a championship game. Down, 14-10, in the second half, the home team goes into the two-minute drill offense. Two strikes get them into the endzone with a minute left and the home team comes up with it, 17-14.

It wasn't a championship game, however. Last Saturday's contest with Nassau Community College was only a tune-up for tomorrow night's opener with Kutztown State at 8 p m at Sprague Field.

The game was marked by fumbles and interceptions as "the offense tried to catch up with the defense."

For Coach Clary Anderson, it was supposed to be a game to iron out the wrinkles and make the final decisions. Some of the wrinkles were ironed out, but the decision still has to be made.

Jim Wassel and Craig Hugger, a j u n i o r and sophmore respectively, are both vying for the quarterback position.

Wassel started the game, but it was Hugger who threw the

extend the string of 19 dual-match wins.

Mizzone has one more semester to complete at Montc la i r but has already competed in the four semesters of cross country allotted by the NCAA.

"You cannot help but miss a fellow who could run with any team in the country," said Horn. He added that Mizzone will train with the members of his old team. "Just having him around is good," stated Horn.

Another top-notch performer who will be absent this season is M c G r a t h . McGrat h , who

two passes that took the team into the endzone in the final minutes.

"Wassel was the most e x p e r i e n c e d , " Anderson commented. "But on passing he seems to want to wait too long."

However, Anderson lauded Wassel's command of the running game.

"Wassel or Hugger will start (tomorrow) but it depends on how they do in practice," the mentor concluded.

The touchdown pass that won the game Saturday was a Hugger to (Paul) Pignatelle combination that clicked for the freshman team last year.

Hugger's familiarity with his receiver's moves may have meant the success of the play, but Anderson pointed out that it was the first time that the two had run the pattern in a game situation.

As for the defensive unit, which caused two fumbles and picked off three NCC passes, Anderson commented, "Nobody from the defensive unit who played regularly is back, but our defense should be just as good or better than last year."

graduated this past June, ran as the squad's number two man behind Mizzone. "He was an extremely good performer," reminisced Horn.

As has been the usual procedure for the past three summers, Horn had some of his lettermen spend a week at his Long Island home for practice. With him this year were co-captain Bill Lowing, Tim O'Donoghue, Fred Geiger, Al Johnson, Guy Pilsbury, Jim Migliorini and Greg Weiss.

Horn rates O'Donoghue as the number one runner this year.

7 IND IANS 1972 FOOTBALL SCHEDULESept. 16 KUTZTOWN STATE HSept. 23 EAST STROUDSBURG STATE HSept. 30 C.W. POST COLLEGE HOct. 7 Cortland State AOct. 14 Central Connecticut State AOct. 21 WILLIAM PATERSON COLLEGE HOct. 28 Southern Connecticut State ANov. 4 TRENTON STATE H

(Homecoming)Nov. 11 Jersey City State ANov. 18 Glassboro State A i

ALL HOME GAMES SATURDAY NIGHT 8:00 P.M. y

MSC Harriers

Can They Do It Again?