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The Daily News
The Oldest College Oaily Founded January 28,1878
Vol. XCIII No. 96 Copyright 1972 Vale Dally NEWS
NEW HAVEN. CONNECTICUT. TUESDAY.FEBRUARY 29, 1972 787-5791
YNFAC Seeks
To Aid Reform
"They'retrying to patch up a fewof
the holes in their machine like we're
trying to do in ours," explains office
committee coordinator Bill Berndston
in characterizing the relationship
between the University and the Vale
Non-Faculty Action Committee
(YNFAC).
YNFAC, Local 104 of the National
Council of Distributive Workers of
America, lost its bid for University
recognition by a wide margin in an
employee election last November.
In a membership meeting last
month, YNFACcreated a Constitution
and System of Representation
Committee in an effort towards internal
reform.
No Endorsement
Although the November vote was
legally a defeat for YNFAC, neither
Vale nor the Union read it as an endorsement
of current policies
"Vale is on probation," Berndston
Anothercontroversy centers around
the pay raise that is to be announced
today. Designed to relieve the
clustering of employees at the
minimum of their salary range, the
increase, which will take effect
tomorrow, adds $125 a year to the
salaries ofall employees with at least
one year of serviceand who are still at
the minumum.
A $500 maximum was set, however,
to which YNFACobjects, contending
that "theraises are eight months late
and still penalize those employees
with much more than four years
service."
According to Williams, however,
"The raises are only an interim
measure. Full consideration for a
raise on the basis of merit will be
given to all employees by the July
annual adjustment."
Other issues raised by the union
said. "The vote and the preceeding
and subsequent dialogue clearly
demonstrated a need for improvement.
It will be up to the
Universitytomeet this need or face a
vote next year which it could lose."
One of the major areas of employee
and union objection is the grievance
system. According to Kimble
Williams, director of personnel,
"There are objectionsabout having to
go through supervisors and administrators
with grievances that
possibly involve them."
An evaluation of the grievance
system conducted by Williams has
recently led to theaddition of areview
board composedof Williams,aperson
selected by him, and a person selected
by the grievant, the latter two subject
to the approval of Williams.
include the transfer system which
requires employees to request a
transfer through their own supervisor;
the lack of a non-professional
non-faculty employee on the Council
on Priorities and Planning; and
health and safety on the job.
Admitting the need for better
communication, Williams set up a
series of meetings in January, which
all employees could have attended
during working hours.
Out of these meetings came the
recent changes in the grievance
system and the pay scale. At the
request of many employees, the
Personnel Division is now writing an
employee handbook which will contain
University policies, procedures
and information on fringe benefits.
Williams is also planning a monthly
newsletter for employees.
Hillman Will Discuss
Psychology Revisions
Dr. James Hillman, a leading
analytical psychologist of the C. G.
Jung Institute in Zurich, will be at
Vale for the next two weeks to deliver
the 1972 Terry Lectures.
Dr. Hillman's subject for the lectures
will be "Re-Visioning
Psychology." They will deal with the
relationship of the conscious with the
unconscious.
The four lectures will be given on
February 29, March 3, March 7, and
March 14 in the Davies Auditorium of
the Becton Building. They will be
given at 4 and are open to the public
without charge.
The ValeConcertBand will make its fifth tour of Europe
this spring vacation, playing concerts in Belgium.
While at ValeDr. Hillman will give
two other lectures: on Wednesday,
March 1, at 7:30 in the Divinity School
and on Monday, March 6, at 5 at the
Medical School.
The Terry Lectures were
established by a gift from Dwight
Terry of Bridgeport, Conn., for lectureson
religion in the light of science
and philosophy.
In the past the lectures have been
delivered by such scholars as
Margaret Mead in 1957, John Dewey
in 1934, Jacques Maritain in 1943,
Reinhold Niebuhr in 1941, and Loren
Eisley in 1967.
Holland, and Britain. They gave local audiences a
preview of the tour repertoire Saturdaynight at Woolsey
Concert Band Plans Spring Tour,
To Visit Eight European Cities
Yale Group Spurs
Mao's Emergence
William F. Buckley was not theonly
Vale figure connected with the
Presidential trip to China. Without
Yale's support Mao Tse Tung may
have never risen from obscurity to
command China.
Jonathan Spence, professor of
Chinese history, was the first to
discover Mao-Tse-Tung's connection
with Vale.
The professornoted, "In 1919,Mao,
aged 26, was in Changsa, having
finished his middle school education.
He visited Peking and while there
received his...serious introduction to
communist theory in Li Ta-chao's
Marxist Study Group.
Editor of Vale Journal
"Now, if he was to develop a
reputation in socialist circles, he had
to find a
views...
forum to propagate his
"At this crucial point the student
union of Yale-in-China invited Mao to
take over the editorship of their
journal."
Mao accepted the position and
changed the format of the student
magazine: it would now deal with
social criticism and current problems
and focus on "thought reorientation."....
Mao traveled to Peking and studied
Marxist theory. In Shanghai he met
Ch'en Tu-hsiu (who later became the
leader of the Chinese Communist
Party). Mao was told to form an area
branch of thecommunist party, but he
The Vale University Concert Band written expressly for wind ensemble. "Divisions." by Justin Connolly, and
will tour Europe, performing in This reflects an important development
in contemporary music, since Wind Ensemble." by Yehudi Wyner.
"Canto Cantabile for Soprano and
Holland. Belgium and Great Britain
March 16 to 30.
many avant-garde composers are Connolly taught at Vale for some
The band plans to give eight concerts
in eight different cities. effective medium for their ideas. Collegeof Musicin London. Wyner is
turning lo the wind ensemble as an time andis now teaching at the Royal
Highlights of the tour include a
recording session for
The specific
Belgian
selectionsin
Professor of theband's
Composition at the Vale
repertoire
National Radio and a performance,
are among the
School of Music, and is
best written
well-known
the last of the trip, in the new
for thewind
Queen
ensemble in this
both for his writing and his
century.
performing
Elizabeth Hall, to be
These
recorded by the include Schoenberg's "Theme
The "Canto Cantabile"
BBC for later broadcast-
and Variations." Op, 43a;
represents his first major effort using
American
Keith Wilson,conductor of theband,
composer Noel the full wind ensemble.
Scott Stevens'
will direct the tour, as he has done on "Cameos." for saxophone and band;
The whole tourwill not be devoted to
each of the band's five previous
Percy Grainger's performing, however. The
visits
"Lincolnshire
schedule
Posy";
to Europe. The
and Aaron
band's
Copland's "Emblems."
particularly in Amsterdam and
allows for several days of free time,
assistant
conductor. Bryan Simms. is the tour
liondon. As on past tours, much of the
manager
The repertoire also includes two accommodations for the band will be
'Hie repertoire lor the tour emphasizes
modern compositions Band lor this tour They are where the band will
compositions commissioned by the provided by families in the towns
perform.
Vale has helped many young men begin their political rise to power. In the
Class of 1919. in addition to the 1,000 male leaders graduating in New Haven,
Yale-in-China was helping a young manby thename ofMao-Tse-tung.
had neither funds nor a meeting
place.
"Once again Vale stepped in,"
recalled Spence. "The medical
college of Yale-in-China agreed to
rent him three rooms, which Mao
named his 'culture bookshop.'
Businessboomed and Mao was able to
ring up high sales on such Chinese
titles as "An Introduction to Marx's
Capital," "A Study of the New
Russia," and "The Soviet System in
China."
"Mao's reputation grew, and from
this base he was able to organize
seven branch stores/continued the
professor of Chinese history. "The
profits generatedwere used to finance
the socialist youth corps and the
communist party."
Professor Spencefurther noted that
because of the success of the
bookstore, Mao was chosen as one of
the delegates to the First Congress of
the Chinese Communist Party at
Shanghai in 1921. From there it was
only a small step to becoming one of
the founders of the Communist
movement in his country.
Yale-in-Chinanow supports the New
Asia College, part of the Chinese
University of Hong Kong. It is
maintained on donations and is actively
hoping to interest the undergraduate
communityin its affairs.
PRICE 15 CENTS
China Scholars Praise
Nixon's Formosa Policy
Yale's experts on China expressed
guarded optimism yesterday in
response to the joint American-
Chinese communique released
Sundaynight by the twosuper powers.
The communique announced forthcoming
U.S. troop withdrawls from
Taiwan and brought cries of protest
from the Nationalist Chinese press.
The collection of Vale scholars polled,
however, seemed pleased and
gratified that the United States has
chosento diminish itsrole in what the
experts consistently referred to as a
"Chinese problem."
While applauding the step toward
normalized relations between the two
great powers, the East Asian
specialists cited the unsolved schism
over Taiwan as areason forcaution.
They seemed to agree that the
American resolution to withdraw
from Formosa does not remove the
tensions between Communist China
and Nationalist China.
Hurdles ToBe Met
Hans Frankel, director of graduate
studies in the East Asian Languages
Department, observed that there are
hurdles still to be met. "The solution
lies in a slow process of accomodation
to take place between the Chinese,"
explained Frankel. "Nixon's move
facilitates this."
The problem of accomodation
seemed an important one to several
instructors. Chinese lecturer Howard
Chao stressed the psychological
rather than the physical threat to
Nationalist China's security.
"Communist China believes it can
take Formosa without firing a shot,"
he declared, "and therefore will not
attempt an actual invasion of the
island when American support
leaves."
Letting America OffTheHook
In Chao's view, American troops
never belonged on Taiwan to begin
with, and he described Nixon's move
as "letting America off the hook."
The Chinese lecturer spent several
years as a journalist in Nanking
before fleeing to Japan in 1948, and
said he was "veryhappy" about the
move to take the American presence
out of Taiwan.
While pleased with the new policy
change, professor of political science
H. Bradford Westerfield noted that
Taiwan's position has worsened.
"Taiwan has always been doomed
because it refused to surrender its
claim to authority over mainland
China," he explained. "The demise of
Chiang's regime, however, has been
brought closer. Instead of falling in
two or three decades,he will probably
be gone in ten years or less."
AMatter Of Timing
Westerfield praised the actual
communique as a "masterpiece of
timing." "I was very impressed with
thegingerlyskill of mutual feeling-out
thatIfound in thedocument," he said.
"It reflects a great amount of
diplomatic work on both sides, and
shows the care and precision with
which this journey was executed."
The political scientist stressed the
achievements made by the joint
statement in Sino-American relations.
"Both sides have moved forward,
and yet have burned no bridges
behind them," he remarded. "Our
concessions on Taiwan have not been
decisive and we haven't yetboughtoff
the Chinese; but this is a wonderful
development from the standpoint
Connecticut Consumer Group
Criticizes Phase II Controls
At a press conference held
yesterday by the Connecticut Citizen
Action Group (CCAG), a survey was
released outlining food price increases
in the New Haven areaincreases,
which, according to Toby
Moffett, directorof CCAG, "show that
the administration's economic game
plan is a hoax."
The study emphasized that increases
have soared above the Phase
II guidelinesset down by the Cost of
Living Council.
According to CCAG, the survey
represents heightened consumer
group action resulting from ineffective
monitoring tools provided by
Ihe government.
CCAG, a Ralph Nader-initiated
group concerned with environmental
and consumer matters, sponsoredthe
study as part of a statewide and
national effortby consumer groups to
hold down food prices.
The survey included seven towns
and covered a two-month span from
December 2 toFebruary 3. Conducted
by housewives, students, teachers,
and other shoppers, the CCAG study
examined price changes in items
from 32 supermarketsrepresenting 11
chains.
CCAG director Moffett characterized
the survey's findings as
"devastating," referring to a price
rise of 7.8 percent in meat items and
an overall food price increase of 1.7
percent.
Inaddition, according to the survey,
price increases for items covered by
Phase II controls more than doubled
Ihe increases permitted by the Phase
II regulations. Items exempt from
controls rose almost three times as
much as those subject to limitation
Michael Kane, area representative
of CCAG, claimed if these pricerises
are projected over a year, "government
figures for set increases are
meaningless."
Limited enforcement by the Internal
Revenue Service was cited by
Moffett to explain the government's
inadequacy in maintaining its price
guidelines.
To meet this inadequacyand bolster
consumer price protection, the CCAG
made three recommendations in the
survey:
• that the Cost of Living Council hold
immediate hearings to stabilize meat
prices by incorporating them under
the Economic Stabilization Act of
1970;
• that the House Banking and
Currency Committee make a full
investigation of the Price Commission,
which CCAG feels has little
public representation;
• that the findings of the survey be
posted in the state so that consumers
can use this data for their own benefit.
New Educational Programs At Yale
Apply Theories To The Classroom
By PHYLLIS ORRICK
After dropping its MAT
(Master's of Teaching) program
and disbanding its graduate
departmentin education sometime
in the mid-forties, Vale has moved
back into the field of educating
educators.
Vale has instituted two new
education programs: the Center
lor the Study of Education in the
graduate school and the Vale
College Teacher Preparation
Program on the undergraduate
level.
The design of each program
highlights an important
educational issue: the question of
the relative merits of research,
removed from actual experience,
versus classroom teaching
practice.
Secondary School Teaching
The Teacher Preparation
program, directed by Allan
Pierson, trains Vale undergraduates
for teaching school
;it the secondary level. Pierson has
emphasized actual classroom
experience in the design of the
program.
The main element of the
program is the course Teacher
Preparation90, a regular seminar
supplementedby fourhours a week
of classroom experience in
preparation for a senior year of
practice teaching.
As an accreditied teacher
training program, its aims seem
complex to Pierson. "If it just
becomes a mechanism for getting
teachers certified, it has a low
priority. Vale should have a more
profound influence on education."
Pierson siad.
He emphasized that he did not
wish to impart "just the accumulation
of theories, but the
nature of thecontent.We must give
substantial experience in what it
means to be a teacher," he added,
"in order to advance to state of the
art."
Teaching Practice
Consequently, in addition to a
strong theory base, the student
teachers will receive a lot of
practice in actual teaching.By the
seventh week of the nine-week
teachingexperiencein senior year,
the student will handle a full course
load (up to five courses) for five
days a week.
"It's very hard to practice
teach." commented Pierson. "It's
not easy to spend all day in the
classroom and rush back to Vale
for your Strindberg seminar."
According to Pierson's plans, the
student will be "getting involved
with the life of the school."
'Tailor-Made Assignments
At present thereare 25 students
in TP 90. Pierson tries to achieve
"tailor-made" teaching assignments
since he has such a small
number of students to place. He
cited several unique teaching
situations this year as a result of
his efforts.
For example, one student who is
interested in rural education is
teaching in a rural high school in
Connecticut five days a week.
According to Pierson, twomajor
educational issues emerge from a
closer examination of the Teacher
Preparation Program. First,
Pierson mentioned the program's
stress on the need to maintain a
long-range professional committment
to teaching. He
recognized the difficulties in
remaining a teacher. In addition to
(he lack of teaching jobs. Pierson
cited frustration as a major cause
for people leaving teaching.
"Bright people leave because
they are frustrated," he said.
"Often they can't accomplish
anything because they lack
credibility among the more experienced
teachers. People who
haven't hadthe experienceto earn
the respect will be frustrated and
eventually will leave," he continued.
Therefore, he expressedthe need
for training young teachers extensivelybefore
they actually get a
job.
Secondly, Piersonis aware of the
unique position teacher training
holds in the Vale liberal arts
program as a skill-oriented
(continued on page 3)
discipline. "If one of the purposes
of liberal arts is to know yourself
better, then thiswould be helpful, "
he maintained. He added, "To
writea term paper foran honors or
to convince the kids at Lee High
School of the meaningof the Treaty
of Ghentare two different things. If
we can't make these connections,
our society is in trouble."
Apply Social Science Skills
On the other hand, the new
Center for the Study of Education
will deal primarily with graduate
students through the structure of
the Institute for Social and Policy
Studies.
(continued on page 3)
Or. AlbertSolnil. chairmanof theValeCenter fortheStudy ofEducation,
describes the education program as "a vital means to apply social
sciencetheoriesto the broad areas of common concern in education."
2
Yale DailyNews
.
Second class permit. Second class postage paid at New Haven,
Conn. The Vale Daily NEWS is printed by Hamden Chronicle
Publishing Co Hamden, Conn. Published daily except Saturday
and Sunday during the college year. Subscription price in so per
wear. National advertising representative is National Educational
Advert.sine Service, HO Lexington Aye.. New York, NY. Mall
address 2*l-A Vale Station, New Haven, Conn. MS2O. Tel.I 301-717
mi.
Paul D. Hagstrum, Publisher
Charles E. Cuneo,Managing Editor
John L. Geesman, Managing Editor
Matthew A. Coles, Editorial Editor
Frederick Y. Crall, Executive Editor
Donald R. Letourneau, Executive Editor
Michael C. Spencer, Executive Editor
I. Randall Yates, Sports Editor
Albert F. Shomash, Production Manager
Robert S. Steinbaum, Associate Business Manager
Edward N. Maurer, Circulation-Subscription Manager
Dixie J. Terrell, Photography Editor
Craig Johnson, Associate Editorial Editor; David Moore, Chief
Photographer; Molly Cox, Chief Staff Writer; Walter Frisch, Fine
Arts Editor; Bill Brennon, Drama Editor; Robert Katxenstein,
Assistant Business Manager; James Grumboch Finance Manager;
Kerry Bloomingdale, Charles Coles, Charles Halasx, Use Goldberg,
News Editors; David Kusnet, City Editor.
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 29, 1972
News:
Kerry Bloomingdale
Sports:
Randy Yates
Photography:
MarkMandell
CopyEditors: The CrackMonday Night CopyEdit Team
Night Editors: Jim Liebman. John Peirce, John Yandell
Contributors:... SteveCharnovitz, Michael Denner. Edwin Games.
Chris Smith, EH Spielman, Hayden Trubitt
How to get sick without trying
By JEFF GOLDFARB
February was a good month to
get sick in. I recommend it for
March. When campus activities
lag and last Sunday's "Nancy"
strip seems to have more intellectual
content than your
textbooks, getting flat-on-yourback
ill is a handy way to relax
and brick it all without the
normal guilt stigmas. The initial
expense is small-aspirin, the
miracle drug of New Haven, is
fai.ly cheap, and cough drops
cost even less.
The first step, of course, is to
pick a disease and then catch it.
If you're really fed up with the
semester, there is always
mononucleosis, but for a brief
respite, a stomach virus, head
cold, or throat infection will
provide all the ugly germs you'll
need. These can be picked up
anywhere-in the dining halls,
classrooms, mixers, and intimate
theatres on campus.
If your roommate is already
afflicted, ask him or her to
breathe on youawhile. If all else
fails, go to thenew Deapartment
of University Health building. It's
an all-day adventure, and if
you're not sick when you go in,
you will be when you leave.
Off The Record
While waiting to see a doctor,
you can catch up on the year's
mail,orread a Victorian novel or
two. There are valuable old
copies of "The New Yorker"
available, with remnants of
previous readers all over the
Bergdorf Goodman ads. Bring
sandwiches and cookies and fruit.
Wear comfortable clothing.
When you are finally ushered
into an examination cubicle,
there will be another wait, but
that gives you thechance toplay
with all the futuristic gadgets
imbedded in the walls. The new
DUH was designed by Stanley
Kubrick, and many scenes from
"Clockwork Orange" were
filmed right in the building. The
same genial warmth pervades
theplace that can be found in any
stall of the Cross Campus
Library.
You can judge how much time
youcan spendbedridden by what
the doctor prescribes. Two
aspirin entitles you to cut one
class. Up to eight aspirin and
liquids allows you a whole day
off.
More than eight aspirin,
liquids, and a penecillin
prescription can justify sloth for
a week. If you merit all of the
On His Majesty's Secret Service
The grading non-mystery
By MATT COLES
"Great Changes." we are told,
were proposed for the Vale
College grading system behind
closed doors Thursday night.
A proverbial "veil of secrecy"
surrounds the night's
proceedings. Members of the
Committee have taken to
ignoring their doorbells and
living in fear of the telephone.
Something, big it is easy to
surmise, must be up. Or is it?
It isn't really very difficult to
guess what the Course of Study
Committeehas been up to. After
all, they are a committee of Ihe
Vale faculty, and as such, are
more than likely lo address
themselves to that aspect of
grading which has the faculty
most upset. Something less than
spiritual divination is needed to
sec thai the increasingly high
percentage of high passes, more
than anything else, is disturbing
the scholars ḢighFail
The tragic fate of the high pass
has come to be described in
terms usually reserved for that
other favored quantity, the
dollar. It has been "devalued"
throughoveruse. It doesn't really
mean high pass atall anymore, it
means just pass, while the pass
above, plus orders to stay in bed,
you should have no qualms about
sleeping until Sprink Break.
Things to do while in bed
(provided you are alone and
feeling vaguely ill):
Sleeping: A good dose of flu
virus can set you humming like a
top for days on end. (The aspirin
will help this along.) Naps included,
youcanbring the total up
to 23 hours a day, with an hour
leftover for eating, preening, and
massaginglife back into the arm
you slept on.
Being delerious: This natural
"high" would be even more
pleasurable but for the bringdown
of blowing your nose every
so often. During clog-free
YAM. DAILY \K\VS TCKSDAY. KKBfU ARY '"I. I!)7J
gradehas come tosignify that the
student look Ihe exam li is a high
fail if you will.
There are only a couple of
things the Course of Study
Committee could possibly do to
remedy the situation. They could
goto an all-numbers system and
IVtrj (JildcrskirM-
eliminate the problem completely.
They won't though
because the faculty isn'l all that
energetic and the students would
raise hell about "returning lo the
stone age."
They could institute a pass-fail
system, but. they won't do thai
either because the pre-med, prelaw
and pre-graduate students
(and that's most of the student
body) would have an awful time
come junioryear,and the faculty
would raise hell about abolishing
standards completely.
One More Time
The easiest course to follow
would be Ihe traditional Vale
"variation on a theme" or more
of the same in a different
wrapper. In order tobreak up the
log jam at high pass, the committee
will probably insert one
more new grade into the old
system. It could be callled Low
Pass, or Low Honors, or Super
High Pass, or something entirely
new, it doesn'treally matter. Any
periods, though, you can babble
incoherently, fantasize to your
heart's content (make sure the
door is closed!), and even write
articles like this one.
Listening to the telephone: The
gentle lilt of the ringing in the
next room is an added pleasure
on topof theprimary satisfaction
of driving your friends crazy by
seemingly never being home.
Most people ring about six timesdiscover
the anal-retentives in
your peer group by finding out
later who rang 20 times, etc.
Eliciting Sympathy: Stumble
into the living room once in a
while and smile weakly at your
roommates. In a small, wheezing
voice,say thingslike: "What day
is it?" "What does food taste
like?" and "When is Chairman
Nixon coming back?"
Not doing anything at all: Lie
there,unableto sleep, too dizzy to
concentrate on anything, and
watch the books on your desk
loom large and multiply like
rabbits. Stareat thewall until the
poster hung two degrees out of
perpendicular drives you berserk.
And finally, wallow in your
ownphlegm and wonder if it was
really worth it tohave kissed that
girl on Saturday night.
of these would achieve the
desired result; a more even
distribution of grades, with a
small number of students
receiving the highest mark, the
majority split in the middle
designations and a respectable
number just above failing.
In effect, you may say, A.B.C-
D,F. In effect, yes, but not in
name. If the committee were to
change outright to the letter
system, they could be charged
with regression and the students
would have another excuse to
raise hell. The psychology is
much the same as that used by
Mr. Nixon when he called his
invasion of Cambodia an "incursion".
And, by grafting on to
Ihe old system, the committee
can continuetoinsist that there is
a substantive difference between
their proposal and the letter
system.
No Credit
Of course, public relations are
an unpredictable commodity and
just to make sure that the
students don't see through this,
clever contrivance, the committee
might give in to the long
standing clamour todrop the fail
grade and replace it with a "no
credit" designation.
If this is in fact all the Committee
has planned (emphasize
the subjunctive), then why, one
might justifiably ask, all the
secrecy? If one were cynical,
one might put it down to a latent
manifestation of professorial
James Bondism, but that would
be unfair. The Committee wants
tomake sure that the facultyhas
a chance to see the proposal in
print first hand before word
leaks out, so that thescholars can
be sure that it meets their objectionsto
the high pass problem.
Thentheywill have a chance to
muster that sense of Community
which they evoke, in Ken Mills'
words (remember Ken Mills?)
only when they fear student
opposition. Student opposition
probably won't be very strong, if
indeed there is any at all.
Of course, it is possible that the
Course of Study Committee has
something else entirely in mind,
and that its report will contain
revolutionary proposals and
radical new ideas. But don't
count on it.
Times change dept.
The current Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution
is absolutely necessary and
most timely for consolidating
(he dictatorship of the
proletariat, preventing
capitalist restoration and
building socialism.
-ChairmanMao
Dave Mason: very enjoyable Headkeeper
Andrew Elkind
The Overlooked
jProfession.
It needs more skills,
offers more different
careeropportunities,
andprobably takes
more college grads
than anyomen
We have a man coming to your campus which describes exactly how modern
who can tell you a.great deal about insurance works. Why we need more
an opportunity-filled industry you BAs, BSs, BBAs and MBAs in
probably haven't considered yet. And administrative, analytical and sales
how your education fits in.
management positions to keep up with
Meaningfully. Whatever your major. the changes.
We're talking about insurance. A After you've read it, we think you
modern, sophisticated, fast-changing may want to see that /Etna man when
world that's a mainspring of the he's on campus. He'll be as truthful
economy. Today, it's one of the most with you as the book is.
stimulating areas of business there is. He's scheduled to be at your
Your placement office has an /Etna placement office
brochure titled "The Whole Truth"
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
and a JOBS-participatmg company.
MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1972
LIFE & CASUALTY
On Thursday, March 2nd, an Officer
of Millen Industries will be at the
office of Dean Moritz, 105 Sterling
Sheffield, Strathcona Hall, to interview
serious candidates for
positions of permanent employment.
The opportunities available are in
factory management with fast
advancement into top management.
The candidate should have an outstanding
record of achievement.
Work experience is strongly desired.
Millen Industries is a multiplant
producer of paper and paperboard
products for both home and industrial
applications.
j our concern is people
PEANUTS
Headkeeper
Dave Mason
Blue ThumbBTS 34
Well, people, what we have
here is a new album by Dave
Mason, now on his own (again)
since splitting from Traffic
(again) after Welcome to the
Canteen. And despite apparent
contractual difficulties with Blue
Thumb records, Dave has once
again turned outa very enjoyable
album.
Both Mason's voice and his
music are filled with happiness
and easygoing fluidity. He
remains a very capable
songwriter. These qualities,
coupled with a band of highly
competent musicians and the
tasteful production of Mason and
Tommy LiPuma combine to
make Headkeeper a very
playable effort. It isnot an album
of overwhelming brilliance or
excitement, but it does come off
as a warm and satisfying
recording.
Side one highlights five new
songs by Dave Mason. All of the
songs are at least pretty goodtwo
of them are excellent.
Vintage Mason
The album opens with "To Be
Free," a gospel-like invocation to
joy in freedom:
"Searching for a feeling
Like the movement of the sea
Like a wheel within a wheel
Only man and woman see...
Take the time to be free."
On this cut and throughout the
album, Mark Jordan excels on
piano and organ. After two
verses, the keyboards and vocal
are joinedby drums, guitar and a
triumphant chorus. A wild
tambourine adds the perfect
touch, and the song rocks out
beautifully.
"In My Mind" is a very pretty
song, a gentle depiction of happiness
tinged with melancholy:
"And I'd like to lift you into
All the joy that's there to find
And I'd like to light the shadows
So you are no longer blind."
The instrumental backing,
reminiscent of that on Rod
Stewart's last album, combines
piano, mandolin and slide guitar
to produce a very mellifluous
sound.
The rest of the songs on side
one are all vintage Dave Mason,
and they're good, though not
exceptional. "Here We Go
Again" is a light number
featuring mandolin and percussion.
It reminds me of the
Hollies--I think Graham Nash
provides one of the accompanying
vocals."A Heartache,
A Shadow, A Lifetime" (a
Dave Mason title if ever there
was one) is also a pleasant song.
The title tune, "Headkeeper," is
possibly the weakest cut on the
album. It never quite settles into
a rock groove which would enable
it to exploit some of its exciting
hymniike possibilities. Mason
adds some nice licks on guitar,
but during the solo he seems
more interested in demonstrating
his speed than adding some
power to the song.
Troubadour
Side two was recorded live at
the Troubadour. At least that is
what the linernotes tell us. But if
it were not for the applause we
would never know. The band is
very tight, the recording and
mixing are excellent. This is one
of the best live recordings I've
ever heard.
I believe that "Pearly Queen"
is an old Jim Capaldi-Steve
Winwood composition, though
Mason receives credit for it on
this album. No matter. Mason's
vocal is good,though less stylized
than Winwood's on the original.
The instrumentation is outstanding.
Jordan provides some
very exciting organ playing and
Rick Jaeger's drumming is
equally superb, particularly
whenhe rides the cymbals during
the breaks. Mason adds an excellent
guitarsolo, thoughit lacks
the stereo effects of Traffic's
version. All in all, I think the song
holds together as a unified
composition much more than it
did for Traffic.
"Just a Song," "World in
Changes," and "Can't Stop
Worrying. Can't Stop Loving"
are all songs which appeared on
Mason's first album. Alone
Together. The instrumentation
has changed a bit and the sound
is, of necessity, a bit sparer, but
in each case the live version
equals or surpasses the studio
recording. I was particularly
impressedby theband's handling
of the rhythmic changes on
ROTC papers
To the Editors of the News:
Before this bewildering
campaign for restoring ROTC to
our midst goes much further, it
might be well to think about
creating a forum for the orderly
exchange of information and
considered opinion on the subject.This
did not seempossible to
do the last time around. Acase in
point: (he ROTC commanders
invited the Course of S.ludy
Committee to examine the official
teaching materials.I did so
and found some items richly
"World in Changes." On all three
cuts Mason's voice is nearly
identical to his own original.
"Feelin' Allright" is a tune
which Mason first recorded with
Traffic. Ironically, on this album
he leans toward Joe Cocker's
version, relyingheavily on piano
and percussion. Even so, he
domonstrates that although
Letters to the Editors
deserving of public
dissemination. But there turned
outto be no way to communicate
these excerpts from our local
Pentagon Papers to a wider
audience. They could not be
discussed in the Course of Study
Committee because that body
docs not examine and judge the
details of course content. When I
al lcm.pted lo bring them before
ihe Vale College faculty, I was
shouted down by a colleague, the
only timeI have ever seen such a
thing happen in any kind of
faculty deliberation. My effort to
bring them before Ihe general
meeting at the Ingalls Rink was
"Feelin' Allright" has been
frequently recorded, it still
remains his song. Mason's vocal
is excellent-looser and less
restrained than on the Traffic
version, but without theapparent
strain and effort of Cocker. The
result is aperfect ending to a fine
album.
Enjoy!
frustrated by the radicals' insistence
on "participatory
democracy," i.e., disciplined
small-group control of large
crowds. I thenwrote up the whole
business for the New Journal,but
ils editors judged, prematurely,
as it now appears, that the issue
was passe. The ROTC problem is
troublesome and involves a
deal more than the matter ol the
draft. If the threat of restoration
is a seriousone. I wouldhope that
an educational community could
find a less haphazard way of
probing and debating il.
Jeftrey1. Summons
Professor of German
Want to see A Clockwork Orange?
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HOSEYS TAILORS
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——-
■■
■ II II ■ ■ I ~ ~.,. —„„■„—■ ■
yale repertory
fAI
theatre
1 presents
I
By Natalia Ginzburg
Translated by
. S.W.y. F.1,,„., y \i. 197?
John Hersey
THE HARTFORD COURANT:
>^*>'
Both plays are by European
, , ,
r
~ .... women who want to use the
slagc
, 0 exam.mc lhe ro, es Qf
women in marriages. As playll>),li<)l1
TJloir .wr '° nts'bo,n "chew action and
llclllclll X IdV concentrate instead on the illu-
•pv ■■
i • • n -a , mination of character through
Van Ronk Solid
In Blues Show
By PAUL BERNSTEIN
Dave Van Ronk is the kind of
performer who must be seen in
person to be fully appreciated
Stomping, shouting, laughing
hysterically, quieting to a soft
falsetto, drinking tequila in
slocking feet. Van Ronk had little
trouble pleasing the Davenport
audience last Saturday night.
His husky, rowdy voice is
perfect for blues. The big man
hardly looks like a guitarist. At
one point he stopped and looked
at his guitar as ifhe didn't know
what to do with it.
But when he launched into
favorites like "Candy Man" and
"Come Back. Baby" if was clear
that he did.
Van Ronk teased the crowd
with promises of his best-known
song "Cocaine" but never got
around to performing it.
Between the blues. Van Ronk
slipped in some fine unaccompanied
ballads and some notso-fine
slow songs.
Thebitter "If You Want to Be a
Hero, Follow Me," sung only to
hammering foot-beats, had to
compete with the comic expectations
the audience had
brought along. But one the crowd
caught on, the song was very
effective.
Van Ronk could have been at
an IRA meeting as he sang the
V.M.X li.MI.V NEWS
but on "Clouds" he was just
humoring himself, as well as
over-acting.
Slow blues was another story.
Van Ronk's version of "Rocky
Road" puts Peter. Paul and Mary
lo shame. His high, thin voice
achieved a nursery-rhyme
quality and his picking was
unobstrusive but good.
In general, his guitar work was
very good-clean, sparse, and
innovative within the tradition.
Like all tasteful musicians, he
avoided Ihe temptation to show
off. On the slow songs he was
content with simple strumming.
Yet his picking on"St. James
Inlirmary" was technically
flawless without being
mechanical.
The break in this song was
interrupted by an offer of tequila
from the crowd. "It's so nice lo
see alcohol coming back," said
Van Ronk. "I felt isolated."
Roy Bookbinder, who played
before Van Ronk, is a forgettable
ragtime guitarist in the tradition
of Rev. Gary Davis.
His voice is undynamie and
monotonous. His guitar work is
competent, but he has a limited
stock oflicks whichhe is forced to
repeal.
He got better towards the end
with a good version of "She's in
the Jailhouse Now" and showed
good picking and instrumental
dynamics on "Going Down to the
Devil."
excellent "God Bless England"
in the same style.
llPllo*hfTlll at recollection. And both achieve
'■
"-"fe" J 1 ' J The slow songs would be
"* **■*> their dramatic ends through the
Y"olp
ins 'gntful an(t superb writing of
unquestionably mediocre taken Bookbinder endedhis set with a
A dIC A Iltdlcl their central female character. out of context, but, as a contrast carbon copy of Davis' "Delia."
to the rough, While
loud songs,
"A Place Without
were
F good until they were overdone.
sZ»% Doors" is a sombre examination
Iramlalu by John Hersey, as pre- By
of marriage as 3 priSMl-like in-
the time he got to Joni
Mitchell's "Clouds" as an encore,
Wi": *ZZ V r£m% stittition which destroys its inmroudh
April »; directed by Roger habitants, "I iMarricd You for VanRonk had done too many. His
Hendricks Simon; set and cos umes by .u r-> t r.«, ■
Brechtian
Sleven
falsetto worked on
Rubin.- Homing designed by WU- tne * Un 0f ls a Stlntlier,
nam b. w»r(ei. "The Golden Apples
more optimistic " work which
of the Sun"
..Yale Repertory Theater is asks certain questions about
IML
Teacher
FtCIURt IvntTOtL S Mm%m\
opening its spring season with a why 6 et married and
'm basins American pre, & """
miere of an
SBi.»w«iHTOr-J«H
XCI" IMF \ -M*
STMOIC»IC- ■ .
Italian comedy with Miss Ginzburg's play focuses
■ -"•***&>/ M
the provocative title, "I Married on a poor peasant girl named
HELD
W
You for the Fun of It!" " Giuliana, who has struck it rela- Program
As translated by John Hersey tive '.v rich by her recent marfrom
the ,ta,ian of Natalia Gin,
(continued lrom page I)
Its program will focus on two
burg, this is a sometimes talky, ch ance meeting with her husbut
always engaging work. And band, the grl has had what classroom teaching experience
levels of educational work: the
lhe acting by the five-member some might and social science research, aouits
view as a sad life,
and Ii issL
cast under Itoeer Hendricks Si- what with getting fired from her the particular and the abstract.
mon's well-paced direction is jobs and being abandoned, pregextraordinarily
gooo;.
nant, by her inattentive lover. science techniques and skills in
"We are seeking to apply social
Obviously, the piece is a. do- But as Joan Welles creates
the service of improving
mestie comedy, but an unusual Giuliana, none of these adversione
in both its construction and ties are very sad at all. Instead, the individual classroom in the
education in effortsto understand
itf outlook. Though it uses the they are recounted as a series individual school, ''■ Sdlnit explained.
mother-in-law (rim- of rather entertaining adven-
standard
mick, it does so in a The
way that lures. Miss Wellcs-a tall
ISPS describes1Itself as a ,> JAStJSU'*Ol-Omi*«SeCHADW!CK
seems very fresh and real-al- blonde with a long mobile face
"problem-oriented institution
which Plus ADULT
facilitates
HIT!
most as though this situation ."-does a wonderful job of bringhad
never been tried on stage ling Giuliana radiantly alive it faculty and students." In ad-
"WESKEND
research by
before. is quite unfortunate, in
dition, it "contributes to
fact^
LOVERS" t
The action of the play is mini- 'that this delightful person educational programs in the
exists
mal: husband and wife wake 'only on stage!
university at all levels: undergraduate,
post-doctoral and the
up, husband
davenport
leaves for funeral, dramat
* "BothTMissWellcs and the othwlfe
talks with maid, mid-career."
presents
husband er members of the cast also do
returns to announce he has in- something else very nicely:
Oasis for Educators
THE LADY'S NOT FOR
vited his mother to lunch, moth- foey subtly suggest their Haler
comes to lunch with her .' ianness without going for any center is the
The major program in the
BURNING"
daughter. Mid-Career
And this uneventful obvious cliches or accents. Alcourse
of events is uncomplicat-
Ad-
u comedy by
Program in City School
yin Epstein is especia'ly Christopher Fry
imed
by an Samuel According to
ministration.
almost total absence of pressive here; he builds his
directed by
Brownell, director of the
crisis and confrontation.
Susan Hagan
" character—a rather spoiled program, the founding of the
Strange then, that "I Married "dolce vita" playboy—by the program in the fall of 1970 In: The Davenport
You for Dramat
the Fun of it" is so way he ,iolds his body-walking reflected general trends in Vale Al: 8:00 P.M.
thoroughly absorbing. It works about or relaxing on a bed. educational development. Vale On: March 2, 3, 4, 5
though because the literary Though the first act admittedmarriage
of Natalia Ginzburg ly drags a bit-because of the was being done
"sought not to duplicate what Admission Free
and John Hersev elsewhere" as
is so success- static direction of a long monoful
that the
well as "put Yale's resources to ROSEY'S TAILORS
script brims with, logue by Miss Welles—the secwll
their best use," Brownell said.
and insight—which the ond act' moves fluidly and efdirector
The program is
OPP.
attended by 10
SILLIMAN
and his cast have, fortlesslv. .Especially important to 14 fellows chosen from applicants
from school systems
ALTERATIONS
caugm precisely!
AND
here are excellent perform^ces"
Jhe tone male in the play Is by in
the Elizabeth Parrish. as Pje_- cities REPAIRS
of 150,000 or more.
husband, skilllullv nlaved hy tro's arrogant, long-suffering Designed as "an oasis" ON SHORT
for
NOTICE
ftlvin Epstein,. And in Ihis fact mother, and Sarah Albert-sou as career-educators, the program is
is an irony worth noting: one of "his gawky sister, whom mollief based on the supposition that the
Epstein's mosl recent acting as- dresses like a little girl. Misj administrator is so busy with his
signments was in Marguerite _Parnsh's performance is a mas- organizational responsibilities
Duras' "A Place Without [terniece of enmir timing an,fl that he does not "have time to
Doors"-wiiich is a way is the Mi.ss Albertson is jusl hilarious keep up with therapid changes in
darker side of "I Married You Stephanie Cotsirilos is al-Tq social problems, technology and
for the Fun of It." and funny as th" management."
' jnaid Victoria.
MALCOLM 1.. JOHNSON
PEACE CORPS
THIS WEEK:
TONIGHT - 8 pm
VISTA
Wednesday -
at
8 pm
Saturday - 2:30 & 8 VALE
pm
STATION
Former
Theatre —corner
volunteers will be here to answer questions
and to assist students who are available this June
of York & Chapel Streets
for programs beginning this summer (7,000 Jobs)
Reservations 562-9953
Feb.
Student
28, 29, Mar. 1-Mon thru Wed.
Rush available 1/2 hr before curtain
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TI'KSDAY IKBIU AliY ill. I!1TJ
Gorky Emerges
His Own Enemy
ByBILLBRENNAN
It has taken over B5 years for
Maxim Gorky's "Enemies" lo go
from Ihe page lo Ihe American
stage, and anyone curious as to
why ihis play by one of the
greatest of modern playwrights
should have been so long in
reachingan audience here should
go see the Vale Dramat's
'American premiere"
production.
II is simply not that good a
play. Nor is it that important a
play. What it is is a rather poorly
constructed play typical of the
sort that was being written in
Eastern Europe between the turn
of the century and the Russian
Revolution, dealing with the rise
of the working class as seen
through the eyes of the declining
arislocracy.
What fails to distinguish the
play is that Gorky does nothing
truly distinctive with his subject
matter. The action revolves
about Ihe turmoil in a Russian
town when the workers demand
lhat their foreman be fired. In
retaliation, the owners of the
factory One decide to close it down.
of theowners is shot to death
by a worker, and the rest of the
play is concerned with the
owner's family's dissension
about the workers'situation, and
their efforts to find the murderer.
The play is written in three
acts, but seems more like a oneact
play with a discursive
epilogue in two acts. The
aristocratic family Gorky
focuseshis attention on is simply
not interesting enough to carry
Ihe play by themselves.
Brilliant First Act
In the first act, though, when
theplay intenselyconcerns itself
with the threatened strike of the
workersand what action shall be
taken against them, we have
engaging drama of thebest kind.
Director Nikos Psacharopoulos
has filled the stage with color,
movement, and excitement, and
the Bardin estate comes
shockingly to life before us. The
first act is one of the finest hours
of theatre I have seen on theVale
campus.
Alter Ihe owner of the factory
has been shot, however, the play
leaves the drama of the situation
aside in favor of discussion and
propaganda. The workers talk to
each other about socialism, the
family members talk to each
other about socialism, and the
workers talk to the family about
socialism. What action there is is
overshadowed by the didactic
land by now naive) discussions.
The second act slows down lo a
snail's pace after the motion of
Ihe first, andby thelime thethird
acl rolls around we arereally not
very interested in the plot that is
being resolved. And the final
tableau, family on one side of the
stage, workers on the other,
singing the "Internationale" or
some such hymn, borders on the
ludicrous.
Acting Distinguishes Play
The distinctive achievement of
thisproduction is thehigh level of
acting that Psacharopoulos has
gotten from the mostly student
cast. Jim Stephenson as the
pragmatic Nikolai, Carol Potter
as his reactionary sister-in-law,
and Peter Evans as the sardonic
Yakov, were all compelling and
believable,as was GlennMure as
Ihe factory owner (too bad he
dies halfway through the first
act). Norma Brustein, as the
Bardin family's matriarch, and
Chris Rosanya as the embittered
Aunt Tatyana were both strong
and provided excellent contrasts
within the family group.
One of Psacharopoulos's objectives
in the play was the
achievement of an ensemble
effect, and nowhere was he more
successful than in the castingand
directing of the factory workers.
Those who see "Enemies"
should not go merely because it is
an "American premiere," for
here theplay isnot the thing. It is
a production worth seeing for its
level ofacting and that incredible
first act.
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Experts Praise
Chinese Policy
U-anlimicd from page II
of improving, diplomatic
relations."
Not quite as optimistic was
John Hall. A. Whitney Griswold
professor of history, who expressed
"very little confidence
that the present American administration
knows what it's
doing."
Hall called the Nationalists'
claim to represent all of China
"ridiculous," and termed the
removal of American troop
support "long overdue."
On |.he whole, all.the scholars
questioned seemed lo approve
Ihe outcome of Nixon's China
trip, and perceived no tangible
threat to Taiwan resulting from
U.S. troop diminislnnent there.
The experts appeared in
agreement also on the premise
that Ihe nature of the Chinese
split was essentially an internal
one, and that the United States is
pursuing the correct course in
withdrawing "civilwar" her troops from a
situation. None of the
scholars expressed the opinion
lhat America was shirking her
committments to Taiwan.
I jrrjjTTjritjjEEI tonight
' thru MAR. 4
mats
AMERICAN PREMIERE
EVES. 8:30 ORCH. I.t. BAIC. 2nd BAIC.
Mon.-Thurs. $7.00 6.50,6.00 330
Fri. & Sot. $8.00 7.00,6.50 3.50
Thurs. Mat. Mar. 2 $6.00 5.50, 5.00
.
350
Sat. Mat. Mar. 4 $7.00 6.50,6.00 350
Zlf if/ri4m'4tmmmmi
EVES 8:30, MATS WED. & SAT. 2:30*-"
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DAVID MERRICK presents \«Pjßp
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FINAL WEEK
_
In everyones~.,,.,.
life there?:
WEEKDAY, 7:00-7:00-9:30
SUMMER QF
SAT-SUN CON. FROM 2 ,_ "•
ff""i|111 I 'B 8.8 I ■\WsiRBvT^Tt^I'tBSSBJ
X X -N.Y.0.9.N.W.
The Hot Rock'
"A DELICIOUS CAPER!"
-Judilh Criit, NiwrorkMogoiine «3&GP
Robert Redford GeorgeSegal
Rot Leibnv.n.Pcii.it Sand.Mooi.;; tnjmiVYlliiini Redftelii
TooS ° ZeroMostel
NOW iS^iit| from
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TONIGHT
HORROR FLICK MIDNIGHT
THE NIGHT WALKER
sWr.se
F. W. Murnau's silent Mm triumph.
Wednesday' march' i"
"^?*"
1 THE MARRIED COUPLE
5
A documentary by Alan King,
director o/"Warrendale.
101 LC 7, 9:30
NEW HAVEN 70 Lawrence (Off Whitney) 624-0789
ii'f y'F TT 7
Cont. from 12 Noon
V.: ':.. 11l I'HIL J 1 ! lit Run
•SEX RITUAL
jmlmmm "ANYTHING
«"r SSL '
| SOMV WOrWIt OMIIB
°r
COLOR
COLOR
4
VAI.K DAILY NEWS. TI'ESDAY, FEBRI'ARY -'11. 1972
Fencers Top Princeton, 16-11
Elis Break Tie In Last Round
RECORD SPECIALS
Bring this ad into Cutler's anytime
The Vale fencing team's sabre convincing 5-1 epee victory over
rattlers continued to win at a .666 Peter Rcdway gave the Elis their
this week and receive the following
clip and spurred the team on to a fourteenth and winning point.
16-11 victory over Princeton With the meetalready in hand.
$5.95 List LP's for
Saturday at the Jadwin Gymnasium
in Princeton, New Jer-
Edwards in the foil added im-
$
Rich Kroop in the epee and Chris
sey.
pressive victories. The latter win
Q 76
This makes the first Vale win came at the expense of Bruce
each
over Princeton in the last fourteen
attempts, although last of his bouts.
Alfson, who had already won two
season the Elis came close but
SnipperSweeps
Harvest
nevertheless lost 14-13.
Captain Rossi Snipper of the
Neil Young
The afternoon began before a Bulldogs demonstrated his
Headkeeper
fair number of enthusiastic leadership by personal example.
Dave Mason
onlookers as Vale took the first
He look all three of his sabre
Solo
round 5-4. Princeton rallied to bouts to raise his record for the
Paul Simon
capture the second round by the season to 25-10.
Live
same score and matters were Although Snipper was the only
tied up going into the thirdround. Eli swordsman to have a perfect
Third Round Surge
Four
day, several of the team mem-
Led Zeppelin
At thispoint, Larry Levin in the bers managed to turn in 2-1
epee came storming back
American
from a
Pie
showings.
Don McLean
3-0 deficit to gain five straight
Steve Blum won two of his
points and a win which was
followed seconds later by Ev
bouts in the sabre but was
Music
beaten
Carole King
soundly by Rich Keslar. the
Wetchler's foil win over Bill
Gonzalez.
best Tiger sabreman, who
Fragile
ac-
Yes
Following along counted for two of his team's
Matt Love goes up for a layup in a game against New Haven earlier
on this tide of three wins in that event.
Woyaya
thisyear.Closing in are Gary Franks and JeffRitter(21).
Blue momentum, SteveDorsey's Yale's foilmen Ev Wetchler
- Osibisa
and Chris Edwards fenced well
Low Spark ol
and have been gaining consistency
in the last few matches.
High Heeled Boys
Frosh Cagers The epee delegation from New The Vale fencers defeated Princeton Saturday for their first victory
Lose Pair; Haven which has taken some against the Tigers in the last 14 matches.
- Traffic
You must bring in this ad
abuse this season responded well
with Larry Levin and Rich Kroop
contributing a pair of wins each.
Tiger Bright Spot
Crimson,Indians Triumph Penn Trackmen
The onlyreal bright spot for the
Tigers was the performance of
their epee star Dan Wigdowski,
who won his two bouts prior to
being lifted fora substitute when
Without leading scorer and with 23, hitting 11 of 14 from the Jones and Brian Crushcombined the contest was out of reach. Win Heptagonal
Captain Gary Franks, the Vale floor. Feguson, who played his for 41 points to pace the Indian The Tigers are now 3-6 for the
WORLD FAMOUS
freshmanbasketball team played best game of the year, according victory.
season and have only one more The Vale track team finished finished lower. The last time
one of its best games of the year to Coach Vito DeVito, had 17 Even more effective, though, team to face-the mighty seventh in this year's heptagonal Vale won theheptagonals was
against Harvard Saturday, but points and cleared the boards
in
15 was Dartmouth's press, which Columbia Lions.
meet at Ithaca Saturday and 1961.
\Jwl UobaccoS
nonetheless suffered an 88-78 times.
lorced Vale into 38 turnovers. As for the Elis, they now Sunday.
Last weekend Eli Coach Bob
loss.
The loss of Franks and his 25- "We were just completely flat," possess their best Ivy League The University of Pennsylvania
took the heptagonal winning performances from both W.B.s No. 3 (Original)
On Friday, theElis dropped an -point
Giegengackreceived strong point
scoring average made the moaned DeVito. The Bullpups' record since the 1960-61 campaign.
The Bulldogs' overall crown with a team total of 62 Rich MacDonald and team
83-62 road tilt to the Dartmouth other Elis more offensiveminded.
"The other players tried badly throughout the season. record for this year is now 8-4, points to second place Navy's 42. captain Mike Wolak.
poor ball handling has hurt them
freshmen.
Vale started strongly against to give a little bit extra," said Ritter had 20 points and 13 which is their most successful Cornell finished thirdwith 32, and Wolak took third in the 35-lb.
Harvard and held a 27-26 lead DeVito. The veteran coach rated rebounds against Dartmouth. since 1954-55, whenVale wonnine Army, Harvard, and Princeton weight
with 7:45 remaining
with a toss of 55-10, seven
in the first the team's effort against Harvard
second only to its 83-80 rebounds. Reserve Greg It was a most gratifying day fourth with 22 points each. meet winning 62-5 >/i.
Stampfl had 18 counters and 16 meets.
ended up in a three-way tie for feet short of Bregar of Navy's
half. The Crimson then reeled off
eight consecutive points, including
a damaging three-point
victory at Columbia, February 4. Dubinetzgrabbed 10caroms in a overall at Princeton for Yale's Vale, with nine points edged MacDonald took second in
SSI
the
At Hanover, Friday night, with brief stint.
coach Henry Haruntunian who Brown-8, Dartmouth-5, and 60 yard high hurdles with a time
play by forward Lew Brown, but Franks recovering from a successful
eye operation in New season this weekend against clash with Harvard, next seventh
TheElis, now 4-11, finish their can now focushis attention on the Columbia-0. The Elis also placed of 7.4 seconds, .4 off of Perm's
Vale came back with six in arow,
including four by
last yearand have never Collins.
6-5 Jeff Ritter. Haven that morning, Dartmouth's
inside-outside duo of necticut.
Whitney Gymnasium.
S»J.iU
Bridgeport and Central Con-
Saturday afternoon at the Payne
Harvard pulled out again to a
44-36 lead with two minutes to
Sports Briefs
W.B.s No. 3 (ORIGINAL) is the pipe smoker's dreamcome true. W.B.s
play in the half, but Vale came
No. 3 has no artificial flavoring. It is so mild and smooth that it can be
back again tocut the deficit to 44-
smoked ALL DAY with delightful enjoyment and satisfaction.
-41 at The Vale freshman hockey Mercer, and Debbie Ritter
halftime.
learn
Harvard never suffered a 6-4 defeat at the represented the Vale
lost the lead in
Women's
the second half, but Vale
Squashmen Top
hung
MIT, 9-0; hands of Harvard Saturday at squash team at the national intercollegiate
Ingalls Rink.
close. The Elis
tournament held
moved to within
two at 60-58 on a basket by
The Crimson burst out of a 2-2 this past weekend at
hotshooting
Barry Stampfl
Trinity
tie at the end of the first period College.
with
with threequick goals in
12:42
the
to play.
first All three wereeliminated in the
Guard TakesControl
four minutes of the second period tourney's first round, but both
But at that point Harvard Lose To Princeton, 6-3
to take a commanding lead. Mercer and Frishman met with
Ron Graber, Mark
guardMike Griffin took control of
Sargent, some success in the consolation AMERICA'S LARGEST & FOREMOST
Frank Paveck,
the game. Piercing
and Dave Buchar flights. Mercer
the Eli
reached the
TOBACCONISTS
scored for the Elis. now 8-9. finals of the second
defense with length-of-the-court
consolation
TheVale squash team hadlittle Kirkpatrick Wins MIT, 9-0, and then fell to
drives and
Prin
pinpoint passes,
flightbefore being eliminated by 268 COLLEGE
trouble
STREET, DOWNTOWN
whitewashing MIT, 9-0, Al number three
NEW HAVEN
Kirkpatrick ceton, 7-2.
Gail Frishman,
Griffinpropelled Harvard to a
Margaret an opponent
74-
from Bowdoin.
Friday in the Payne Whitney had an easier PHONE 624-3250
time downingMark
-64 lead with 7:29 left.
Gym, but the Elis met their O'Brien, 15-11, 15-14, 13-15, 15-12,
Vale refused to quit, however, match Saturday at Princeton, as but at number five, Wallworth
and came back to within four, 80- theTigers triumphed, 6-3. was also extended to the limit.
-76 on a jump shot by center Bill Agianst MIT only Bruce The freshman standout split
Ferguson at 2:50. The Crimson Maronpot was extended beyond games with his opponent, Rusty
kept its poise, though, and pulled straight games before posting a Johnston, and was taken into
away.
15-12, 12-15, 12-15, 15-12, 15-6 win extra points in the final game
Griffin led Harvard with 19 over Bruce Blair.
points and Graham before triumphing, 15-10, 10-15,
10 assists, 12 of his Arader, at number one, set the 15-9, 12-15, 18-13.
points coming in the second half. match's tone with a 15-4, 15-7, 15- Princeton's 6-3 win hinged on
Brown had 17 points, and center -12 victory over Jim Rodgers. several close matches,
Lou Silver scored 15
particularly
at numbers seven
and grabbed At Princeton the tables were
11 rebounds. Guard and
Arnie reversed. Yale's three winners, eight. Eli Steve Sherrill
Needleman had 14 points,
lost to
and Arader, Rick Kirkpatrick, and Hollis Russell in five
lankyreserve center
games, 10-
Jeff Wheat Seth Wallworth. all had to battle -15, 15-11, 18-13, 11-15, 17-14,
added 10 points
and
in 10 caroms. four or five games before Chris White fell to Princeton's
Most of Yale's firepowercame defeating their opponents. Pat Haymes, 15-12, 15-11, 16-18,
from its front line. Ritter had 23 Arader fought back from an 15-13.
points and 12 rebounds, but early 2-1 game deficit to topple The Vale "B" team met much
missed 11 of his 20 free throw Princeton's Dave Page, 14-16, 15- the same fate as the varsityover
attempts. Stampfl also finished -10, 14-15, 15-12, 15-8.
the weekend. The Elis blanked
GROUP DIVISION OF
-^jfjjflaV
SHURE TOURS
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WHAT HAVE YOU PONE WELL, ONE MIGHT SAY
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SHE'S
BEATRICE.' YOU'RE NOT BEATRICE.' WITH HER? OUT TO LUNCH RIGHT NOW...
A BETTER WAV-TRAVEL WITH SHURE TOURS
CALIFORNIA: $78
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Groups now forming for flights to
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It's NOW or NEVER!
Bookings MUST be done fry March 31
13 BROADWAY 777-2567 NEW HAVEN
SHURE TOURS-an established agency you can depend on.'
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March 18 United Airlines Flight 5
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April 2 United Airlines Flight 22
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Chartered bus transportation can be arranged, $10.00 deposit necessary with booking.
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You'll got a free $1.00 record cloth also
with each purchase.