William Paterson University - Pioneer Yearbook (Wayne, NJ)

 - Class of 1976

Page 27 of 280

 

William Paterson University - Pioneer Yearbook (Wayne, NJ) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 27 of 280
Page 27 of 280



William Paterson University - Pioneer Yearbook (Wayne, NJ) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 26
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Page 27 text:

October 20: Bad Day for Pioneers In Soccer, Calvin College broke out on top near the end of the first half, and went on to beat WPC 3-0. The Pioneers had chances to tally but never cashed in. Late in the game. Art Stone, apparently scored a goal but was called back on his own hand- ball. The afternoon football match looked like a repeat of the game against Delaware. Midway in the first quarter WPC made a brilliant goal line stand, but Pioneer, Joe Corria fumbled, leading to a Lions ' TD and an extra point for a 7-0 lead. In the second quarter the Pioneer defense stopped the Cats at the twenty-three but Jack Moretti booted a field goal to make it 10-0. WPC fired up and reached midfleld in the third quarter, but Corria fumbled again giving the ball back to Trenton. The Lions capi- talized on Nate Woodward ' s run- ning, Morrettl ' s shoe, and two WPC penalties to bring the score to 33-0. After the last Lions ' score, Tom Athill returned the klckoff from the sixteen to the WPC twenty-seven. Next, quarterback Bob Pellichia found Athill for forty-eight yards which led two plays later to Pellichia hitting Al Zanka at the one. Four plays later James Rlzlo ran over the line for the Pioneers ' first score of the season. This light at the end of the tunnel didn ' t lighten the 33-6 defeat, or brighten the other two defeats of the day.

Page 26 text:

During the week SGA President Ron Sampath; and Director of Food Services. Chris Miller had a disagree- ment about the lettuce served in the Student Center. Someone found an empty carton of lettuce from Califor- nia in the area and brought it to Mill- er s attention. When told it was scab lettuce. Miller replied. Is it really? Sampath asked for a ' . . . definitive word on this as soon as possible and cited action by the General Council as a possible solution to the matter. Upstairs in the second floor con- ference room, rumblings of a student strike against tuition hikes came from an organizational meeting. The Radi- cal Communications Club brought members of the Women ' s Collective, the Black Student Union and the Vets Association together to discuss the possible strike. They decided on a student rally for October I . Saturday. October 20, proved to be another bad day for athletics at WPC as the baseball, football, and soccer teams all lost their home games. The best showing came from the baseball team who lost to our rival Montclair State 3-1. Despite the defeat, Coach Albies was satisfied with the Pioneer performance. We had an excellent defense, only one error to their four, but we didn ' t cap- italize! ' It was a pitchers ' duel for most of the game, each team gave up only four hits, but walks hurt the Pioneers. WPC hurler. Hal Hermans, gave up four hits in six innings put- ting the winning scores on base for Montclair ' s first Inning three run homer. Walks also led to the Pio- neers ' lone score in the sixth when Jim Konel and Jose Rodriguez took two free bases. Bob Dreschel fol- lowed with a single to bring in the lone Pioneer score. ABOVE RIGHT: Questionable calls mark WPC s loss to Calvin College. TOP FAR RIGHT: Ron Sampath and Chris Miller face over Union Lettuce question, ABOVE FAR RIGHT: The Fall Baseball Team loses by the least only 31. RIGHT: Two WPC penalties cost the Pioneers their second game with Trenton State. FAR RIGHT: Hard hitting action characterizes the WPC attack.



Page 28 text:

On September 24. more than 200 students filled the Student Center Ballroom to listen to the pleas of a woman who was convicted of murder and has been contesting the decision for the past two years. Yvonne Wan- row killed a man defending her chil- dren and was sentenced to twenty years m jail. Ms. Wanrow was touring college campuses to raise money in her own behalf so she could ha ve the freedom to enjoy her children. The students raised $57 and 200 signa- tures to aid Yvonne Wanrow in her struggle against injustice. That evening, Thad Jones Quartet with George Mraz on bass and Wal- ter Norrls on piano played in the first Wayne Hall Coffeehouse to a full house of enthusiastic listeners. The Quartet traded solos throughout the set with bassist. George Mraz play- ing a couple of well-received solos. Coming back after a break. Thad Jones showed his professionalism by allowing a couple of younger musi- cians from the college to gain experi- ence and have a good time. John Klopotowski on guitar joined the quartet for On Green Dolphin Street and The Theme. Garry Manclnelli played piano on Now ' s the Time with Walter Norris gra- ciously sitting out. It was a pleasure to listen and watch such fine musi- cians playing out of pure enjoyment. The last week of September proved to be a wet one. as more than seven inches of rain fell on the area as we caught the tail end of hurricane Eloise. The heavy downpours made commuting to and from school haz- ardous causing flooded highways and zero visibility. On campus, the water cascaded down hills turning lawns Into mud, and asphalt walkways into lakes. The primary activities of the week were umbrella opening and puddle jumping, but no one quite found a way to keep dry. The lights in Raubinger were off for two days, and some classes were cancelled, but at least Buttermilk Falls was flowing nicely. TOP: After two encores. Dawson is as relaxed in his dressing room as he was on stage. MID- DLE: Jim Dawson enters with his guitar and a smile. BOTTOM: California English warms up the audience with soft congenial music.

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