TU ESDAY CTAnmivisarttWNansYOMATMMMT Harriers End So-So Season by Rich SeVgaofl In the IC4A'i, the prestigious New York City meet which put the finishing touches on Albany State's mediocre 1976 cross country season, the Great Danes finished a fair 15th of 34 squads, Monday. Lehigh University won the ISth Annual College Division Varsity run, with Fairleigh Dickinson and Delaware rounding out the top three schools. This meet marked the 100th year of existence of the oldest collegiate organization for track and field, and cross country in the United States. "1 don't think one can be overjoyed coming in ISth," said Albany Coach Robert Munsey, "But with our struggles this year, it is a respectable showing. I felt good about it." Senior Chris Burns concluded his Dane cross country career in strong fashion, coming in 19th of 261 harriers. Burns' time was 25:41, 27 seconds better than his 16th position of the previous year on the five-mile Van Cortlandt Park course. The co-captain had been in a deep slump and presumably the tough competition in the meet was influential in his showing. Munsey commented: "Chris hadn't been impressive in the past few meets, but he did run very well in this one. He has always run well at Van Cortlandt." The coach cited Burns' performance at "one of hit best races ever." This meet marked the second consecutive year that Burnt hat made the A11-1C4A team in hit four-year varsity stint. M.l.T.'s Frank Richardson was victorious in the individual battle, in 25:OS,with Steven Fachus of Bloomsburg College, and Stellan Thorne of Lehigh, coming in second and third respectively. Millersville's Bill Strain, who finished second in the Albany Invitational, came in fourth. Freshman Matt Williams regained his ranking as Albany's second best varsity runner this fall, coming in 78th place in 26:40. His remarkable steadiness and improvement this season were the two most important factors in his performances, according to Munsey. Poor Start Eric Jackson, one of Albany's three graduating seniors (the other two are Burns and Phil Sullivan), took 84th place. Jackson got off to a horrible start when the season began, but did make considerable improvement as the season progressed. But this was not the only aspect of Jackson's contribution to the squad. "Eric has been a good captain and so has Chris. They have been both loyal to the team and to me," said Munsey. Bill Mathis, Mark Dalton, and Kevin Burnett were the next three Albany harriers crossing the finish line, in 100th, 133rd and 136th place, respectively. Burnett had a disappointing season, but the coach predicted, "Next year we'll see a revitalized Burnett; he has a lot more talent than he showed." The seventh and last Dane runner was Mark Lavan. The sophomore, who started the year on junior varsity, made the all-upstate team a week ago Saturday based on his seventh place finish. Squeezed But what a difference a week makes! Lavan was far behind in this one in 167th place. The relatively small 5'7" harrier "got crushed like a fly," in the words of his coach. The explanation was that Lavan got caught in the middle of a huge number of other runners. Munsey, though, was not about to let this outing detract from his runner's year. "Mark and Matt (Williams) were two big additions to the team. And the nice thing about it is that they'll be here for a while." The long cross country season has come to an end; and Albany's final mark stands at 5-6. But the harriers City Neglect Cited In Recent Fire by Bryan Holzberg before occupancy following recent remodeling," said SA President Steve DiMeo in a press release. According to the release, the violations were the renting of the building without its having either a lire escape or sprinkler system. "The city never inspected the building," said Gregg Bell, a Coalition member. "The violations contributed directly to the fire." Students Ellen Dcutschman, George DeLuca, and Monica Leonards were treated at Albany Medical Center Hospital, as were Ralph Hoik, James VanVorst, and Dominick Assaro, former mayor of Investigating Committee To Visit SUNYA Campus It'a • highway o l heavy traffic in Monday's I C 4 A cross-country meet. T h t Harriers finished ISth of 34 teams to close out thtir season. are holding a dual meet winning streak of five, which must be of some consolation. "We have been able to hold our heads high for the last one-third of the season," explained Munsey. Before that, the guys were afraid to go out. I am kind of proud of them, they came along." As an afterthought, Munsey said, "When you don't have a super team, it's pretty tough to be super." Utica. Hospital officials said yesterday that Dcutschman remained in serious condition. Her injuries were described Thursday as burns and separated pelvic bones and other fractures by SUNYA Student Health Service Director Janet Hood. Polk was in fair condition yesterday, according to hospital officials. The joint SA-Coalition release said. "If there were periodic inspection and code enforcement in the city of Albany, substandard and dangerous apartments would not be rented . . . It is becoming obvious that the Mayor. . .and his personal appointees' continued nonenforcement of the laws to insure sale housing will contribute to more deaths, injuries and loss of property." Bell said numerous code violators formation from this campus because have been cited by the Coalition in by Stephen Dzinanka An AAUP committee examining of the awkward position they're in." the past including some whose Upon completing its investiga- violations had caused other fires and circumstances surrounding recent faculty firings at SUN Y schools will tion, the committee will draft a deaths. "We haven't taken a next step," be on the SUNYA campus Dec. 6 report and submit it to the AAUP and 7 to interview faculty and ad- Committee on Academic Freedom said Hell. "There is no followup." Hut Hell said Coalition members ministrators, according to AAUP for review, said Lapidus. He added Northeastern Regional Director that the finalized report might be would appear before the city Comcontinued on pane three mon Council on Dec. 6 at 7:30 as it Martin Lapidus. Prompted by SUNY faculty retrenchments, the American Association of University Professors launched an investigation in September, to scrutinize ca ses it claimed represented significant departures from established prinhas had his contract renewed for a ciples of academic freedom, tenure by Kd Kader Both student and faculty elements single year as opposed to the two and due process within the SUNY of the Graduate Program in Clinical ycarextensions he has received in the system. The tour-person committee will Psychology say they fear that the past. It is the criteria used in arriving at review individual cases of faculty "continuity and stability" of their retrenchment at SUNYA as pari of News P'°Pm is in t u i - these decisions that is becoming a tion following the topic of mounting concern for those an attempt to assess the condition of , . r e s i g n a t i o n last in the program. the academic working environment Am,lysls The major complaint is that too month of Program in the SUNY system as a whole, said much emphasis is placed on research Director William Simmons. Lapidus. In the next month, two of the and publication in evaluating the SUNYA President limmelt H. T'iclds retrenched about .15 faculty remaining faculty members in the program's professors. The Clinical Students Directions members lust spring when he began program will lace contract and shuffling SUNYA's curriculum. At tenure decisions. The third member Committee, recently elected by that time 20 degree programs were slated for termination. Lapidus was unable to explain how the committee would conduct its inquiries. "T hoy will he looking into individual cases," he said, "but I don't know how they'll handle them." SUN V A Vice President for Academic Affairs David Martin said the committee may come away with a one-sided perspective of the situation at SUNYA. Martin expluined that under the Taylor law, administrative or management personnel cannot have discussions with the committee members that might be pertinent to the investigation. Martin pointed out that the faculty is already represented by a collective bargaining union. "What this means," he said, "is that the adminatration is prohibited from discussing its actions with any competing group. The union could charge us with unfair labor practice." Martin said that personnel records and the like will not be made available to the AAUP committee. "They will have access only to public information," said Martin. "1 don't see how they will be able kraut* to carry out a very full investigation from their perspective," said Martin. Resigning Program Director William Simmons staled thai the tenure criteria "focused on publication and Ignored clinical activities." "They're going to get very limited inThe city of Albany was charged with repeatedly neglectingtoenforce a state housing ordinance at a press conference held this morning by SA and the Albany Coalition for Effective Code Enforcement. A violation of the ordinance. Coalition officials said, resulted in a fire last Wednesday at 48 A Dove St., which injured six people, three of them SUNYA students. The conference took place at the site of the burnt building. "This building has a history of housing code violation and was required by law to pass inspection TA Piece of Pie locotM SA Pretident Steve DIMeo (above) was one speaker at today's press conference outside the charred remains ol 48A Dove S I . holds hearings on the city budget. "We're going to line up speakers on portions of the budget concerning Bureau of Buildings code enforcement." said Bell. According to Bell, many legal alternatives exist for those injured in the lire. Suits may be forthcoming against Michael Rickman, co-owner (with Norman Licbewitz and Lawrence Solomon) of the building at 4KA Dove St., and the city of Albany for the violations and neglect in inspections, said Bell, although he is unsure of legal specifics., coniimteil on page two Psych Dept Promotion Criteria Questioned The Season That Wasn't -by Mike Plekarald • It was felt bitterly by both the varsity football team and the varsity soccer team this past Saturday: The former, on the muddy turf of University Field; the latter on the marshes of Binghamton. It is known as defeat. It was somehow fitting that in this most frustrating of seasons, both the soccer and football teams should end their respective campaigns on the same cloudy day. (Even the weather cooperated in the script.) The similarities between the two teams arc worthy of note. Both had been coming off fairly successful seasons the year before and both were looking forward to this one. When it ended six days ago, both teams wanted to forget it. To be honest, both teams did not fare that badly. Hut, as is often the case, success had spoiled both the teams and the fans. And the teams did not fulfill the expectations of either group. Let's start with the griddcrs. Only two short years ago, the Great Da.ies had compiled a perfect 9-0 season and were the toast of the town. They had completed an unblemished season in the Capital District area—the first time that had been done in 60 years. And last year's 7-2 record was all that could be expected under the circumstances of the tough schedule; it's no shame to lose to Ithaca and Albright. But with Saturday's loss to Springfield (a team they had beaten last year on the road), the Danes fell to 4-5—their first losing season as a varsity team. And that one hurt. "I feel bad for the seniors because it was such a disheartening way for them to end their careers," said Head Coach Robert Ford. One look at the face of Tom DeBlois could have convinced anybody of the truth of that. Tom was around in 1974; not only that, but he rushed for 1,000 yards and was voted male "Athlete of the Year" at Albany. Closing out his career, DeBlois rushed for 60 yards in the 24-0 loss and ended up as leading rusher with 530 yards this year. But that meant nothing to him, or the rest of the team. His tears were not just those of a lost game but rather the tears of a lost season. Of a team that did not live up to its expectations. The tears of a totally frustrating year. So, too, the soccer team. Beginning the season with one of the most talentladen teams ever at Albany, the Hooters didn't hit their stride until midseason. And in the final regular season contest against Brockport, the Booters lost 2-1 on a penalty kick goal with one minute remaining in the game. The game that kept them out of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament. It was frustrating because the Danes had made the NCAA's each of the last two years—and did that with a young team, it appeared as if this year the Booters would put it all together and really go places. But it was not to be. Playing on the sloppy field of Binghamton in the ECAC Tournament, the favored Danes once again succumbed; this time by a score of 3-2 on an overtime goal. It was the type offieldthat prevented Albany from employing what it does best: control the ball, The tame type of field that hindered them in the Brockport affair—and kept them out of the NCAA's. All in all, it was quite a frustrating season for the "Big Two" of the fall season. A season that, if not forgotten, will be remembered as "the year that wasn't." VOL.UOIINO.«I Spikettes' Meryl W e i n b e r g makaa an over-the-thoulder return In third game o l Cobleskill match, Wednesday. Albany lost the first game hut won the next two to win the match before deleating RPI. Spikettes Finish With Flourish by Mike Piekarskl With u precision typical of the way they have been playing this year, the Albany State women's volleyball team defeated both Cobleskill and RPI here Wednesday, to put the wraps on a remarkably successful 16-3 campaign. "All eleven of them [players] justified that record," said Coach Karen Cunningham after it was over. "They did a remarkable job." After rallying to defeat Cobleskill 9-15, 15-7,15-5, the Spikettes took it to RPI in the finale, easily winning by scores of 15-3 and 15-9. The final game with RPI was really not as close as the score might indicate. Albany was in command all the way although they did have trouble nailing down the final point. But it was inevitable, And when Judy Leikkanen slammed a blistering spike onto the RPI endline, it was all over, The Spikettes started slowly against Cobleskill and lost the first game of the match by six points. Was Cunningham worried at this point? "Oh, no. I knew we would come back." They did. As they have been doing all year. Albany's specialty this season has been rallying to win the match after bowing in the first game, if we lose it, then we start playing good," explains senior Mary Ellen Foley, one of the "eleven." That strategy was employed once more against Cobleskill as the Spikettes simply overpowered their foes in thefinaltwo games. "It was a team effort," explained Cunningham of that match. "I couldn't single out any one person who won it for us," Neither could she in the aecond match. Playing like Olympic champions at times, the Spiketlea utilized every person in the line-up to bring home the victory. Utilizing the overhand serve, Albany was able to gain many a point on non-returnable serves (both Cobleskill and RPI employed underhand services). Foley scored the first point of the RPI match on just such a serve and Nancy Kolln picked up two more the same way, to make it 3-0. With Meryl Weitzbcrg making saving digs consistently, RPI had its hands full just getting on the scoreboard. Sue Polls' loo-hot-tohandle serve, Carey Maxwell's dink, and two spikes by Marcl Silvermetz upped the score to 9-2 with about ten minutes gone in the game. Two Gerri Cur.tin spikes moments later made the score 12-3. Two of Foley'a non-returnable serves and a Kolln spike put the game away. In the second game, Albany started off quickly but two RPI continued on page eighteen students to discuss the issue with faculty and administrators, stresses the fact that the purpose of their program is undermined by an overemphasis on research. According to committee member Judy Wellins, the goals of the program state that "clinical psychologists will be trained as researchers and clinicians." Wellins pointed out that this was the model accepted in the profession. Accordingly, the committee has stated that not enough credit has been given to the clinical activities of professors, activities that include observing cases, running groups, and arranging activities lor students in hospitals and clinics. In a letter stating his reasons for resigning, Simmons wrote, ". . . all three ol the younger clinical faculty were subject to frequent consideration lor renewal against criteria that focused on publication and ignored their clinical activities." The Directions Committee is worried about the future of the program which involved about 40 students and is the largest of the three graduate-level disciplines in the psychology department. "Some of us may have to decide whether to leave the program," said committee member Tom Neilans, "We're being trained as clinicians with no assurance they [the students now involved in the program] will be in the future." Members of the committee said their lack of accreditation by the American Psychological Association has an effect on theii chances of getting internships and jobs, although none are sure just how damaging it is. Simmons said his attempts to gel accreditation were hampered by SUNYA, and that is was a contributing fuctor in his deci- sion to resign. One of the program's faculty members, Allan Israel, is currently |awaiting the decision of SUNYA's 'University Committee on Promotion and Tenure. According to Israel, Psychology Department Chairman Gordon Gallup wrote a letter to the tenure committee that "wasn't negative." "There is a lack of understanding of what is really involved in a I'hD. clinical training program," explained Israel. "If a member ol 'the faculty goes oul and observes a case, runs groups, etc., it gets him nothing." Israel says that he has been approached with an offer to become interim director of the program, but has made no decision on the mutter yet. As lor Simmons' resignation, Israel said, "I was content with him as director, but I understand why he's leaving." He added, "[Simmons'] resignation forced the issues to be confronted." Along with Israel, SUNYA continued on pane three INDEX Classified Editorial Letters News Newtbrlett Sports 14-17 11 10-11 1-7 2 18-20 Weekend 9 Zodiac News 7 B u t Driver Assaulted t e e page 3 NOTICE The Albany Student Presa will not publish this Friday, Nov, 26, and next Tuesday, Nov. JO, The next ASP will appear on Friday, Dec. J, Happy thanksgiving! •• * * * • ! • • * • • •••>*>• »fc *»#.** »** • *m»*a*m*j»m****mm mn*m ***•*#******* »*****•* ******* ******* ***** **•• * » • » * • • * • • *« * * * ***» ***** • * " •***_ Transition Proceeds Smoothly WASHINGTON (AP) President Ford met with President-elect Jimmy Carter for an hour and IS minutes in the Oval Office Monday/ and promised to cooperate 100 per cent to make litre the transition between administrations rum smoothly. UntAtd Nation After the meeting, both men talked to reporters fathered on the lawn and at Carter left be turned back to Ford and said: "Ood bleu yon, sir" "I believe that the debates and the election itself have reached a conclusion that leaves the nation unified,'' Carter said. "There could not have been a better demonstration of friendship and unity and good will than shown me by President Ford,'' he added. Ford said that in his judgement the transition is working smoothly and emphasized .that he will cooperate completely. Carter said he feels the gracious manner in which Ford and his ad- ministration have responded to the election loss has contributed to peace at home and abroad. He said he believes other nations will be reassured by the smoothness of the transition and the continuing stability of the government and of United States foreign policy. During thienneeting Carter asked the President whether another economic summit conference such as the oneheld in Puerto Rico last June might beineful and Ford replied, "It might be desirable." Seated in chairs next to a fireplace, the two men talked about a possible meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and also discussed the possibility of a meeting with the chiefs of state of a number of foreign nations. Carter said another economic summit "would give me a chance to meet foreign leaders." It was not clear when such a meeting might lake place but there were no indications il would occur before Youth Consider Jobsand Education Top Concerns Carter's inauguration on Jan. 20. President arid Mrs. Ford were waiting at the diplomatic entrance on the south grounds of the White House as the Carters drove up. Carter kissed Betty Ford and shook hands with the President. Mrs. Ford ushered the wife of the Presidentelect into the White House for tea and a tour of the family quarters and some state rooms. The President escorted Carter down the path through the White House Rose Garden, a site Carter mentioned dozens of times during the campaign when he accused Ford of "hiding out in the Rose Garden" and failing to campaign. First Meeting Once in the Oval Office, both men spoke quietly while photographers and television cameramen worked in a circle around them. The meeting was the first between the two men since Ihey met in Williamsburg, Va., Oct. 22, a month ago in the third and final presidential election debate. Smith WIH Resign • » OOP Chairman WASHINGTON (AP) Republican National Chairman Mary Louise Smith, a target of insurgent conservatives within the GOP, announced yesterday she will resign in January but urged Republican! to avoid any "fatal lurch" to political extremes. At the White House, Press Secretary Ron Nessen said he was not prepared to say what role President Ford would play in the selection of a successor but added in reply to question: "He certainly considers himself to be the head of the Republican party." Conservatives have indicated they will move to take over the party leadership in the wake of Ford's loss to Democrat Jimmy Carter. The resignation, which becomes effective at the Republican National Committee meeting here Jan. 14-15, is an apparent peace move to avoid a bitter leadership fight. Mrs. Smith said she hopes it will pave the way for a compromise chairman. BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) Soviet leader Leonid 1. Brezhnev arrived in Bucharest yesterday to tighten the Kremlin's ties with its maverick East European ally. But Romanian leader Nicolae Ceausescu appears certain to retain the independence he has established. Even as Ceausescu welcomed Brezhnev at Otopeni Airport, U.S. Commerce Secretary Elliot Richardson was talking with officials a few miles away in downtown Bucharest about ways of expanding U.S.-Romanian trade. Diplomatic observers said that although willingness to improve relations with the Soviet Union it hasn't changed its basic stance of being independent and developing ties with nonCommunist countries. latest problem, saying he "would do day that the decision cannot be all he could" to help. appealed because the Court of The latest crisis arose Friday when Appeals ruling was on a state law the State Court of Appeals, the and cannot be taken to a federal slate's highest, held that an impor- court. The spokesman said the city's tant part of the last year's fiscal legal staff was studying the various package that saved the city from options available to carry out the default — a moratorium on repay- decision. ment of $1.6 billion in short-term The court set no deadline for notes — was unconstitutional. repayment of the debt and made it The note holders were offered an clear it was not requiring immediate exchange ofthe city paper for bonds repayment which would be "Disrupofthe Municipal Assistance Corp., a tive" to the city's fiscal condition. state agency set up to deal with the The mayor's Sunday marathon of city's financial plight. Holders of talks included meetings with Orin $600,000 worth of the debt agreed, Kramer, a Carter Representative, but holders of the other II billion MAC Chairman Felix Rohatyn, turned down the MAC bonds and a Robert Gerard, assistant Secretary lawsuit was filed on their behalf, of the Treasury and finally a night leading to Friday's decision. session with the Board of Estimate A City Hall spokesman said Sun- and Leaders of the City Council. Israel Gains UNESCO Membership NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) Israel gained full membership in the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization yesterday with admission to the European group ofthe world body. Israel's admission reversed a 1474 U nesco decision that led to a storm of protest in the West and suspension of U.S. dues, which make up one quarter of UNESCO's budget. About S4U million has been withheld. After Israel was acclaimed its 36th member, Soviet bloc nations protested that the Middle East nation did not belong in the European group. Iraq, Jordan, Syria and Egypt told the plenary they only agreed to a compromise on admission procedures that cleared the way for Israel's membership because they wished to contribute to the "spirit ol Nairobi" which they said seeks conciliation rather than confrontation. Regents Seeks to Reduce Financial Aid ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) The state Board of Regents will ask the legislature to make substantial cuts in aid to financially independent college students with no dependents. The board said the idea is to base aid on a student's income. not that of his parents. The change in the Tuition Assistance Program would force independent persons to use more of their own money for tuition costs. Under the plan, for example, an emancipated student with a $6,000 income attending an independent college would get $788 in TAP money. Those students now receive $1,389. At state and New York City universities, such students would get $100, instead of the $639 now available. The proposed legislation would also consider all students over age 35 to be emancipated Jamaican Socialism Under Attack KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) Prime Minister Michael Manley's socialism is pitted against opposition leader Edward Seaga's capitalism in an election campaign in which Jamaica's sagging economy and its relations with Cuba are the big issues. Political violence has plagued both Manley's People's National party PNP and Seaga's Jamaica Labour party .ILP and threatens to keep large numbers of voters away from the pools on Dec. IS. Each par- Sundays at Just-A-Song are filled,} 8 with many unexpected musical treats. Several goodies will be available at a discount on Sundays. ty predicts victory, but independent observers rate the outcome a tossup. Seuga is a 46-year-old economist and former finance minister who was educated at Harvard. He has campaigned in 1,145 villages since March, hammering at Manley's ties to Fidel Castro and intimating Jamaica may be taken over by Cuban Communism if the PNP wins control of Parliament again. The J LP's campaign jingle uses the word "freedom" half a dozen times. PAGE TWO Microwaves Are Potential Weapons WASHINGTON (AP) A Pentagon report says recent Soviet research suggests that microwaves could potentially be used as an interrogation lool and as a weapon to trigger heart attacks or alter the behavior in diplomats and military officials. The U.S. analysis of experiments in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe was released to the Associated Press by the Defense Intelligence Agency in response to a request under the Freedom ol Information Act. The Pentagon said parts were withheld lor national security reasons. The report concluded Soviet studies huvc "great potential for development into a system for disorienting or disrupting the behavior patterns of military or diplomatic personnel. It could be used equally us well as an interrogation tool." is Angered by Nyquist Firing Press Conference Bonner SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) The president of Union College says Ihe Board of Regents' firing of Education Commissioner Ewald B. Nyquist is Blasts Qty "the most humiliating spectacle in the 200-year history of the regents." In a continued from page one Hurold Rubin, also a Coalition member said SUNYA may have some responsibility in the case. "What does SUNY specify as a landlord requirement?" he asked. "The apartment should be safe." SUNYA Residences Director John Welty said SUNYA does not "require proof of Certificate of Occupancy [proof of inspection and a b s e n c e s of housing code violations]." He said that a SUNY Board of Trustees action in 1971 took that inspection responsibility away from the separate SUNY schools and placed it solely on the city, "We do advise people to check for a certificate," said Welty. the University ol Southern California, i Here are some ofthe highlights of the survey: Getting into the college of their choice was the primary concern of nearly 40 per cent ofthe high school seniors. The key objective for 51 per cent of college seniors was to achieve high grades to enable them to find jobs within the area of their specialisation. The under 30 work force put more money as their number one target. (Jetting married, raising a family, friends and personal fulfillment followed in that order. On social issues, the views ol each A survey of 1,200 students found that the primary concerns In life were jobs and education. seniors and only 13 percent for those high school seniors. in Ihe business world, who put the Another major surprise of the sureconomy issue as their lop priority. vey was that the crime issue ranked A similar trend was noted on the fourth among the working people environment. Ihe high school figure beyond the economy, politics and was 29 per cent citing the environ- environment and received little supment as t heir pi imttry social concern, port as a primary concern among against 13 per cent lor the college high school and college seniors. seniors and ten per cent lor those I he students who conducted the employed. surveys look mile ol the apparent Foreign affairs had little impact as decline in activism among young far us t he 17 to 30 age groti p was con- people. One report noted: "II the cerned, less than eight per cent of same project had been dune eight working people mentioned foreign years ago. the immediate response to affairs as a key worry. This dropped Ihe question ol social concerns lo 6 per cent lor the college seniors probably would have been 'the and a lew scattered votes among war'." group varied depending on age. While 43 per cent of the high school seniors said their primary concern was politics, the figure dropped to 28 per cent lor college Romania Hopes to Retain Its Independence Beame Vows To Repay Investors NEW YORK (AP) Mayor Abraham Beame has "absolutely" ruled out new taxes and more massive layoffs in the face of the city's new fiscal crisis — caused by a court decision that the city can't postpone paying off SI billion in bonds. The mayor also said at a Sunday news conference sandwiched between crisis meetings with city, stale and federal officials that nobody who loaned money to the city would be "stuck." "Nobody was ever 'stuck,'" the mayor added testily. "New York is going to pay all its debts. It always has." Beame revealed that he had talked by telephone with President-elect Jimmy Carter Saturday and Carter had expressed concern over the city's While, the national pollsters concentrated on the political elections, a recent survey of young people indicates that their primary personal concerns are jobs, money and higher education. When questioned on social issues, the same group expressed little of the concern that sparked young people to protest during the Viet Nam era. The survey of 1,200 high school and college seniors and young working people, between the ages of 17 and 30 was conducted by students of sociology and marketing at Georgia Tech. Howard University, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, St. Louis University, Rice University, the City College of New York and statement a day after the regents' action.Bonncr said he was "angered and outraged" by the development. The regents plan too would set up a task force to find a successor to Nyquist, whose job is officially terminated next June 30, although he may leave sooner. By an 8-7 vote, the regents, Friday, ordered what was believed Ihe first dismissal of an education commissioner in the state's history. Policy and personality differences, especially over Nyquist's integration orders, had developed between him and the regents as the boards membership changed substantially during Nyquist's seven years in the top educational post. McQueen Testifies Before CC Hearing ROCHESTER, N.Y, (AP) An Attica prison inmate, involved in a scuffle wit guards last summer, testified Monday he was beaten and kicked, and suffered a brokenjaw and a forehead wound in the incident. Albert McQueen, 31, said at a state Commission of Correction hearing that the trouble began as he attempted to retain possession of his Koran, Ihe holy bible of the Muslim religion. The scuffle July II also resulted in injury to three guards. Prof. Irving Younger of the Cornell Law School, who with his law student assistants investigated for the commission, said the hearing would deal only with ihe clash between McQueen and the guards. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS NOVEMBER 23, 1976 Honor Society To Host Dinner In commemoration of the 200th anniversary of its parent organization, Alpha Alpha, SUNYA's local chapter of the national Phi Beta Kappa Society, will host a dinner at the Campus Center Patroon Room. At thedinncrthe names ofthe new student members will bcannounccd. Requirements lor initiation into the oldest scholastic honorary society in the United States is based on a high general grade average with a well rounded distribution of courses. Scheduled to speak at the dinner is SUNYA Professor John Gerber. His Phi Beta Kappa address is entitled, "Belief in Disbelief." Gerber, who is chairman bf the English Department, is also chief of the editorial board of the Iowa-California Edition of the Works ol Mark Twain. The dinner will be in the Patroon Room on Dec. 9 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Ihe following are the seniors and their majors nominated for initiation. Edward Alston, Russian; Maria Abru//ino, History; Norman Maker. Music; Nancy Heller, Spanish; Gary Blau, Psychology; Janet Hostwick. Economics; Shcryl Hreeiu French; Lois Caplan. Economics; Linda Conleld. Anthropology; Peter Croswell. Geography; Steven Drasner, Mathematics; Jamie F.tlelman. Sociology; llene Edlin, Spanish; Floisa Ernst, Sociology. William Galco, Psychology; Melanie Fleming, Economics; Amelia Foell. Philosophy; Deborah Gale. Spanish; Michael Grill. Sociology; Howard Hoffman, Mathematics; Michael Hotchkin. Anthropology; Rose Marie Inman, Interdisciplinary; Gordon Karp, Econo • ics; Bruce Kaufman. C h e m i s t r y ; Robin Kavall. Mathematics; Jane Kelly. Biology; Suzanne Kwoka. Biology; Diane I.adage. Biology. Barbara Lasher. Psychology; Matthew l.ewin. Economics; Tanya Marsik. Psychology; Pamela McElroy, Chemistry; Waller Mitchell. Political Science; Bonnie Ostrolsky. Sociology; Rosemary Puglicsc, English; Cindy Reimun, Art; Keith Rice, History; Daniel Rosenthal, Biology; Andrew Ross, Political Science; Donna Schalfcr, English; .Icanetle Sharp, Psychology; Peggy Stephens, Spanish; Doreen Swanson, Mathematics; Ciregg Zaehary, Philosophy. Radio DJ Saves 'Dial-a-Suicide ALBANY, N.Y, (AP) If radio talkshow host Brian Lehrer hadn't offered to lake "just one more call" at 2:50 a.m. Monday, a man might be dead. Lehrer was wrapping up his weekly talk show on WyUK early Monday when he said he would accept one more telephone call. Investigating Committee continued from /KI^C one ready for publication in an issue of the AAUI' Bulletin late this spring. The ultimate sanction of the AAUP is censure. The placement of an institution on the AAUI' censure list is meant to inform members of Ihe profession and the public thai unsatisfactory conditions of academic freedom and tenure exist at that institution. I he AAUP claims a retrenchment provision in Ihe SUNY collective bargaining agreement circumvents established guidelines far the dismissal ol lenured faculty since it requires no demonstration ol cause, bonnlide financial exigency, of proper program discontinuance. Ihe investigative committee is chaired by Bertram II. Davis, an English professor at Florida State University and former AAUP General Secretary. The other members of the committee are Weselleyan Philosophy professor Victor Goureviteh, Rutgers English professor Daniel Howard, and Cornell law professor Irving Younger. NOVEMBER 23, 1976 The person who called, a 19-year old man from nearby Rensselaer County, mentioned to Lehrer matter-ol-lactly that he was goingto commit suicide. "We were talking about other stuff, when I made some reference to two weeks from now, and he said, 'I'm not going to be around then,' recalled Lehrer. "We talked about music, and just general hull. I was trying to get to keep him going. I wanted to get his name and town, and finally did." State Police then were sent to the home of the youth, whose name was withheld. "I kept talking to the kid while the Slate Police were trying to track him down, bul at ten minutes before 4 he said he was going to hang himself "I asked li lie was goingaway, and and hung up." he said, 'I'm committing suicide.' Troopers Gordon Gundrum and "I tried to talk to him. keep going Maureen (iordinier lound Ihe house with him, to talk him out of it, or find empty when Ihey arrived at 4 a.m. out where he was, or something." 'I hey searched outside the house and I.erher said. "Then we went off the lound the youth hanging from a tree air al 3 a.m. I kepi talking to him, by a rope. They got him down and kept him on the phone. I hen some rushed him toSamantan Hospital ill listener, who deserves a lot ol credit, Troy, where he was later listed in called the police." good condition. An officer ol the Bethlehem Police "We almost didn't make it." said Department rushed to the radio sta- Lehrer. "II that listener hadn't called tion and Lehrer tried to gel ihe man's the police il would have been all address. over." SUNYA Bus DriverAttacked by Mark (ireenstein A SUNYA weekend bus driver was physically assaulted by an unidentified male Sunday nighl as he began his route to uptown, according lo Albany City Police records. The driver was identilied by Yankee I rails manager Harry Schinnercr as Morris Dcmonta/.on, 27. Yankee I rails has been under contract by SUNYA to run the weekend service since last semester. Schinnercr said the assault occurred al 9:30 p.m. "An unidentified girl called i.nd reported that she and two or three o i h e r s had seen the driver assaulted,"said Assistant University Police Director John llenighan. llenighan said Demonta/on had told him that immediately following an argument with u bus rider, he was lui by the person a number of times in Ihe lace and body. I he assailant then lied, according to llenighan. llenighan said "Wedon't know all Ihe details. I here was some kind ol light beciriiselDemoiitit/on| was a hall hour laic or something, He only works during Ihe weekends or we would know all the details, Demonta/on did mil require medical attention, llenighan said. I )cmiiiila/un could not he reached lor comment on the incident or Ihe extant of his injuries. ( llenighan called lor the students on the bus during ihe incident to contact University Police to aid in identifying the assailant. Psych Tenure Criteria Questioned continued from /nine one professors David Duly and Howard I eniien will he subject to the criteria being used by the Tenure and Promotion Committee. At present, these three are the only faculty members engaged in teaching clinical psychology. Three other professors are peripherally involved with Ihe program. James Mancuso leaches a graduate course in personality theory, which Gallupsays is "not unrelated" to the program. John Tucker is the head of the University Counseling Service, .lean Wilkcrson said "yes" when asked whether she taught any clinical psychology courses and then she said, "1 don't waul to he involved in an interview or an article." |CK0t» Doty, who has been at SUNYA for the past four years, will have to undergo reconsideration in the Spring of 1977, Tenne.who has taught at SUNYA for Ihe past year, will not know until Dec. 10 whether or not his contract has been renewed. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Responding to the highly- publicized problem ol Inadequate campus lighting, the SUNYA Plant Department has erected a number of above-ground lampposts near the traffic circle. Previously, the only lighting In the vicinity was from small pale lamps that stood about two feet off the ground. The new fixtures are about ten feet tall and give a more Illuminating white light. PAGE THREE x^mwmv Students Doubt Validity of M H i n r . j S(r<^i0jrk5t»w#. Warren Commission Report KENNEDYMKILLEDBYSNIPER AS HE RIDES IN CAR IN DALLAS; JOHNSON SWORN IN ON PLANE 'Jet****, j • +*nt*ltt,<f+ m crop of college age youth were On the 13th anniversary of the profoundly affected by the Kennedy death of John F. Kennedy, Kennedy assassination, even though the maassasination theories arc an injority of college students were precreasingly popular topic of interest schoolers at the time. on college campuses. According to According to Selinger. "Today's an article in the December issue of college students were then too young Galliry magazine, lew students to seriously think about the believe that the findings of the assassination back in l%.T. They are Warren Commission are just now beginning to grasp what it authoritative or totally valid, all means. Sure we remember the day At some colleges the assassination Kennedy was shot. And not only do theory has become an activist issue. we remember the day. we probably Chris Conway, editor of the student remember exactly what wc were dopaper at the University of Missouri, ing when we heard the news." relates that his school's student body ' Although the college editors sursenate has endorsed a resolution askveyed in the (/«//«• i article were of ing Missouri's Congressional delegathe opinion that the country had not tion to press for an investigation into been told the truth by the Warren Kennedy's murder, with lobbying by Commission, neither did they a group of campus assassination believe that the Warren Commission bulls. deliberately lied to the publicconccrSpreading Controversy ning their findings. Yet. on other campuses, students Walker said. "The Warren Comgenerally observe I he spreading conmission obviously did not do its job. troversy and theories without taking There are too many irregularities any action. and invcsligativeshorteomings in its As Koherh Walker, editor of the report. I don't believe the Warren student paper at the University of Commission consciously or willingly Utah remarked."Thisattiludeseems lied to the American public; but to reflect that 'laid hack' wait-andrather, gripped by the pressure of see approach common to isolated lingering emotional trauma, sought but aware communities." reassurance in the proclamation of On most campuses, articles and selected facts as the truth. speakers on assassination con"Now the only truth we have is the spiracies increasingly draw students' widespread feeling I hat the real story attention. Jan Selinger, editor of the is possibly more massive, more comcampus paper at Pennsylvania State plex, and more deeply connected to University, remarked in the December issue ol' tialU'r. it hat when the vital organs of our government than we want to rcah/e." the /apruder film of the assassinaSieve Hrown, editor ol the student tion was shown on her campus, the paper at Southern Methodist Unevent was attended by a neariversity in Dallas. Texas, said, "The capacity crowd. people ol this country were a little I he college students' remarks in too quick to accept what the Inthe Uallety article clearly vestigation revealed in the Sixties. demonstrate that America's current So: Us ^rsaauic c ,mnutwiuc; fee ~~hm 3sa*gsr. sjffie-r -rswes. 1 svsumr .amir- m a n . S3 it- aucr. Msmw las -isaac :~vmfnrr a s •«>mi*l- acaiCT SHiattL I S c s s s m r -xaas inrlTiiir ^»=K-actnasc •_*'' i r I S ! aansaro r MsaiMc aa-w; assOTs.' n a m 1npTfwt»»lliiwti|MllltrrriMlrti«nwti»r • anws.,-Swe^r.-3r'.-ssaaas£is=«a. i .aunm:: "trattt 3r=s i8JKa*£X ^attjoassucsauassMsa: 4ie-3i!>!B=a- jqaaer 3» a t j*HJg:?ttt askCW.**^ *s r«asma r*£- :***i HIJIfl'lBli null" :. 2- tSESKnm: T * fir~" i"=SKr:ii=x aatsE .JC jfflHal«rjBu»: ,r.'.a- MS ' * ! » ' X • j>jw|-^|^''fc|ljl jttir. w>Mlj)« : A M» Cap. Connolly Shot; Mr*. Kennedy Sah <:< *•:!!> H'in i J W * f 1. ftixt ••"*> • <"'» <** The findings of a recent nation-wide survey of college newspaper editors shows that a growing number of students are skeptical of the conclusions drawn by the Warren Commission. Thanksgiving Customs Change The Pilgrims weren't even the first (AC) A lot of old traditions have died out. liven Thanksgiving has Knglish settlers on this side of the changed. It used to he that the people Atlantic to have a Thanksgiving. As harvest Iest i va 1 s, ol the New World beheaded a young girl to mark the occasion. You just Thanksgivings stretch hack to the don't see that sort of sacrifice a n c i e n t s of l;gypt. S y r i a . Mesopotamia and Koine. anymore. Such celebrations survived in Of course that particular custom was peculiar to the Indians, not the medieval Germany, franco, Holland Pilgrims. Mexican Aztecs offered a and I'ngland as the Roman Catholic damsel to the corn goddess Xiloncn. l-cust of St. Martin. It was observed A similar practice was common each Nov. 11 coincidcntally the among the Pawnee, while other day in 1620 when the Pilgrims set North American Indians used a corn sail. liy that time a baud of Englishmen dance to celebrate the harvest. It just goes to show that the in Virginia held a Thanksgiving on m o d e r n picture of Thanks- a plantation about 3(1 miles west of giving — religious refugees in Jamestown. The day was Dee. 5, somber costumes offering thanks lor 1619. An order of the Virginal a skin-of-thc-tceth existence—is a Company of London decreed: little out of focus, "We ordain that the day of our ships' arrival at the place assigned lor planting in the land of Virginia shall he yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day ol thanksgiving to Almighty Ciod." Helore that. Tinglish fishermen at Newfoundland had observed a day ol thanksgiving in I5K. and in 161)7 the people of the I'opham Colony on the Maine coast set aside such a day. Nevertheless, it's the Pilgrim version ol the event that captured the American imagination. Venison, duck, goose, fish. eels, white bread, corn, leeks, watercress, greens, plums and berries were on the lirsl menu, but turkey and pumpkin pie weren't listed ill records ol the event. TAGO J's •&a£"~ -ml snL A s : a w .rfi-aah "A LKETI.I- TASTE Ol MEXICO" tw sttamnc J iac sotaani aaas tsafrot loot las. at i—• J » :wB*S«.> uarf' ,* J a e » t B > ar-icp-uEH: Miia LIB •LUW : Meat & Meatless Dishes Prepared California Style livery Wednesday is SUNYDAYinThe Albany Store. 50c discount on each $2.00 order. __ Musi present SUNY I.I). ,v»< ion llm- \iu T< > Spicy 577 New Scotland Ave. Albany '76 Shoppers Village, Mcnands 465-7743 ' (Opp. St. Peters Hos. 43K-7073) Wed. -Sal. 11:30-9:30 lues.. Wed., Thurs.. 11-8 Sun. 11:30-6 l-'n., Sat. 11-9 Sun. 3-K c" SiortsteassE. J^tutr * K js»wtnBsi! «CT K r . ' r --.--' ;.i -'if' ilttsltgcSi 4 t M 3M»=E siaifc tfer .mm^c; *W*Wt JH£T- 0 31S MSllVOIsmZ 10,000 discontinued CARPET SAMPLES «dr fctSaSuc- iimrlltiiiliMi '-•OK' jtftcss esRaiiTj :*r.i«i-*s£ jzuttjsr a w te '-.'.' e « r OBI- o.MUttmn:- main; *f SHSOC "BBMS a Every Style & Color j.n& r -,'.r.MS twK "Tfe:;<iner a»BB OK s e e a»^aS SWJM- . r d i j w t*urI .Atmsnfu£i; r.v tae r:.ir- JSK» tear ? HOME v -pt.ypbawc'* Ultra thincasti matching hi ace Orders received by Dec 15.1976 will be delivered before Christmas M i l l chach or monay order to; TELTRONICS, 2400 E. Devon, D a i Pialnat, lit. 60018 Please send the following, watchtes) {Specify your choice of 10 styles. A thru J, followed by S" for silver rhodium #116 96 or "Q" for gold ®I179E> ] I understand thai I will receive, free, a Teltronics calculator with every two watches I order PRICE FINISH STYLE QUANTITV Order any two Teltronlci L E D watches Add *1 00 shipping and handling cost for each watch Illinois and 0«t this e-dlgU. residents add 5% sales tax I enclose my check or money order 5-tunction lor the total i _ electronic (No cash-no COD s accepted Otter good m continental USA only ) memory calculator. Name WM.T battery and carry case. FREE! -^. *••••'/ S«I .*.£»• >r.-L* 1. :••.'. .-uus.lunwuiir 0' tie i * r i m t r a i K r •; *kxmu -Hisjtae "3 Jin*** -tMMtr- tie tpyvat": vaasuKUK} m i-w.-jj lac «»>.'' ye «:• amur. Tmiss. *jmee imaatr *> *JT ijsai mm -roam* »w CHy_ x x x x 9' 12* 12' 15' $8 16 22 27 ..Stale. -Zip- 40 Fuller Road (2 blocks from Colonie Center) 489-1234 Daily & Sat. 10-9:30; Sun. 12-5 advertised in TV GUIDE tatai: in*. fuA TMS&W&U*. 6' 9' 12' 12' FREEI tail i.'nasr" .*.• -S.J; '^ . s s a n ; : Make a colorful rug for only . . . price, no uuesi NOVEMBER 23. 19?6 NOVEMBER 23, 1976 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE FIVE «W»BBR*RStra^8fi&;;,;:i MOON MAKES WAVES 3-^-: U i K'Sf' ! j toffoar jaanof *tt caff mite tarmcttermptpcntai eauyi. Mack of Out material h pabbhibie but n o t Oodems never realize Uuu a ripe and ready small press market is available to them. Small press pubushiag is'a rewarding but hazardous venture. The independent publisher bees soaring production costs, copyright hassles and bookstore ripofls. So why bother? Well, became the talent, says Louise Bcrnikow, port and author of a recent article on the women's poetry movement, b no nursling. Speaking particularly about the women's small press market, Bemikow says " . . . it is an enormous talent, big enough to overflow the room, bigger than this building, bigger than the Hearst caslle.Many writers have turned to the small press market after their former publications have disappeared in the face of the established literary world. Facing a difficult commercial press market is women's poetry. As a result, presses like the Alice James Press in Boston, named for Henry and William's sister. Diana Press in Baltimore and the now defunct Shameless Hussy Press have provided a resource of women's literature that faced a brick wall in the public market. "We arc ignored or condescended to by male small presses' says Marilyn Zuckcrman of the Alice James Press. As a result, women's presses have developed around the country. At the University of Oregon at Eugene, women have recently released an anthology of their poetry called So More Packaged Deals. The anthology grew out of a women's poetry workshop and » hat Bcrnikow calls a "women's counterculture in publishing." Shameless H ussy Press which was founded by a woman named Aha managed to find and translate a rare copy of George Sand's The Haunted Pool. The California-based press was just one of many that concentrated on new themes in women's literature which range from anger to affirmation. But women's presses are only one example of the need for small presses. At William Paterson College in New Jersey, the student government gave $2000 toa group to sponsor a literary magazine called "Gel Well Quick." Co-editor Andrew Vaupel said of the effort. " . . . this type of publication exists for the sakes of those individuals who need to express their aberated ideas . . . this insanity is universal and now. all of the admited cuckoos have a chance to let it all out and have it published." The need for small presses is also evident in a unique venture by Random House Publishers. Moon Books is a new San Francisco feminist press co-published by the large commercial publishing house and is part of the number of small presses which abound inthe Bay area in California. The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and private foundations are making it easier to publish and this year the NEA dispensed $345,000 to 112 small presses. The existence of small presses is clear enough but how does one go about producing a book? Well, the process is deliberate and businessoriented. Making friend. in the printing business helps. Typesetting can often add one-third of the final cost to the book. If one's friends are in the printing business, this may be done gratis. PAGE SIX VACATION A company founded by the Korean Evangelist Reverend Sun Myung Moon has captured a mujor share of the East Coast tuna business. The company, called the Tong II Fishing Company, has been buying up about live percent of the East SENSATION A 9 Day Party DECfMteR 2 6 - J A N U A R Y 3,1f77 TO) MIAMI BEACH EXCURSIONS TO KEY WEST A MSNEYWORLD" V t a i»y -Rw dirlstaas is tbt day that wi sptiL I torft.tautkm wrt iispm. mi U hilly mulpt W1Itonaff art CML MM It i * hit httktim mmmta, i Utmm m'w pot HM0N QUAD OCC. •1159.00 TRIPLE OCC. '$169.00 DOUBLE OCC. Conn., Rhedt Island, Mat*., $20.00 Additional Coast tuna catch and exporting much of it to Korea and Japan. The Reverend Moon recently purchased a licet of fishing boats, und promoters with his unification church way he will launch a major effort lo turn Americans on to the virtues of euling fish. Stephen Baker, an advertising executive representing Moon, has predicted that Moon's newest endeavor may eventually result in fish surpassing chicken as a staple in the American diet. FACELIFTING MARS Are you ready to migrate to Mars? The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has prepared m sal mm***mw m »*»flit*. Tata NT kraal MW hum mi party ill night! | FM i mi frwal v awto i mm. I Oi kmtom aaxst SM'I M M ynir etvirl Timet t Ntw Y w ' t Evt Ptrty, for twenty-seven. tnd i trip to Kty Wott that's a pretty as heavenl | Mm m MtoMm*. ai'll cMtfnut thi fun. f «VM tat* DMftta-fttamd rmmd thi SUM If you'vi m d this fir. md still haven't been sold, Thtri't yet mo more thing you have to be told. Earnramtoi frMft. ml i cwr T.v. AttmttoimUhrywrstntytniSEAl "Impottlblif' yw toy? fl't mounding but TRUE. lor this tuper-low price, you git Ditneyworld T00I Oymfetfa m l privmtortwith ubtnu. Ywllhmnmrtfan.thttyw might gtbtninul On tht third dty of Jm. you'll return to location. Ml realty to writs. "How I Spent My Vacation!" Atawtfem RkjM CM, md loungt, yw will find. LcUti dtytanw toy. tht night blow your mind) So tear off tiilt coupon, Put your ntme on the bus, What thi hill ire you wilting for? Send It to us! Ttoi'i limit md tarn, md thopping nttrby, md dttp-taftrtingyou might wmt to try. drink, dogtrack paasaa, and otfiar bonuana. Opoon:197IVagawnha>reand, and unwnttM irMMQe, $5$ plus Thaktplt im mmnti Sw •» I etmm)mmmm.*l»mt»imtim a feasibility study which concludes the red planet could be turned into a liveable retreat, complete with a breathable atmosphere and running' water. The Chicago Tribune reports that one of the project's scientists, Doctor Richard Young, believes the effort to re-engineer Mars could begin before the end of this century. Doctor Young says that NASA feasibility reports show that Mars could be settled by humans after using satellites to spray charcoal powder on the cold polar caps of the planet. Young explains that this would cause the polar caps to melt, raising the martian temperature, creating rivers and lakes and producing a thin Earth-like atmosphere. According to the NASA study, ths correct kind of scientific effort, costing in the trillions of dollars, could result in settlers from Earth eventually living and working on the martian surface in shirtsleeves. In the meantime, Cornell astronomer Doctor Carl Sagan is warning about attempts by humans to change Mars. Sagan says that Mars may contain low forms of life and, if so, we shouldn't tamper with it. Says Sagan: "If there are microbes there, Mars belongs to them." Cw »- U c "«tt •>" banal e.c.llljj The largest animal that ever lived on the planet Earth is ncaringcxtinclion. Pacific News Service reports that ihe gigantic blue whale, larger insi/c than the combined weight of Ihe four biggest dinosaurs, is vanishing. An expedition from the Antarctic, sponsored by the Smithsonian Instiiule. was unable to find any population of blue whales at all in an area considered its favorite habitat. I he blue whales' only natural enemies are humans, who have hunted it for centuries and depleted many of its leeding grounds offish. A baby blue may weigh as much as 12 tons at birth, and will grow hundreds of pounds a day. Whalers report that mother whales .will take fearsome protective measures if ii baby is under attack, and will later Ssi • 1 Indian Quad Board | POT INSIGHT Ihe l-ederiil (iovcnimenl. in u landmark decision, has decided to stipph approximate!) live mnriiuiiua cigarettes a day in a young schiit'l teacher who claims he needs live i>"i i " wive his eyesight. I ueim-cighl year old Kobcrl Kimihill nl Washington, IK.', has hi n minimal he can now drop by •lu mines nl ihe National Institute nl Drug Abuse mice a week to pick up his personal allotment nl high.|uahl\ gnuTiiincni-gii .Mi weed. The Glen House W CLASS OF'77 PRESENTS PARTY IN MIAMI!! DURING OUR WINTER VACATION DATE 1/3/77 to 1/10/77 $115 Deadline for deposits is Dec. 6 • • a a a Round trip air-conditioned coach 8 day Deluxe accomodations Triple occupancy (Double rooms available) Jan. 3 thru Jan. 12, 1977 NOVEMBER 23, 1976 complete tax included seniors $110 w/tax card Fort Lauderdale - _ . ^_- Round trip day jet with hot meals $119so « Vacation in NOVEMBER 23,197* S4IIII. you can even gel a rmnicclchrily lo come to your parly. lairell says that most ol his party goers are part-lime actors and iiclicssev And. he admits, professional pari) people almost never throw Iheii own parlies because, he says. " I I H V I C loo holing." Looking for a place to have a party, or lor an inexpensive lodge near a major ski center? Then The Glen House may fill your need. This rambling farmhouse, owned and operated by University Auxiliary Services, is located on U.S. Highway 28,8 miles north of Warrensburg, N.Y., just 10 miles from Gore Mountain Ski Center, the largest of the State's ski facilities. The house has 10 bedrooms accomodating 24 people, l-'ull kitchen and recreation facilities accompany a reservation. A token fee of $2.50/sludenl/night is charged. Further information and reservations can be obtained In I8|) Campus Center 137 or call 7-76011. (|!3) Future topics will include: FOR MORE NFORMfflON... PLEASE CALL! ALBANY STUDENT PRESS 8081 PARTYQOIM Have your partial own boring lately? Have your goartt beta Having shortly after the food hvaoaar BILLIONAIRES If that's been happening, you In this era of shortages. Fortune magazine is reporting yet another might want to spruce up your gettogethers with a group of one. a shortage of billionaires. professional partygoers. According to the financial t-or a mere $73, Jack Farrell's parpublication, with the deaths of ty people will liven up a party with a Howard Hughes and J. Paul Uelty, clumsy maid, a tipsy butler, a guest only two billionaires remain in the who falls asleep, or maybe even a US industrialists John D. nude bartender. And for $300 or MucArthur and Daniel K. Ludwig. The two surviving billionaires have one thing in common: they both dropped out of school alter the eighth grade. Mae Arthur, who made his fortune in insurance, says: "If I'm rich. I don't know it." Hut then he added: " I work for companies that are rich as helland I ownallthc stock, so maybe that makes me rich." First Lecture: November 23 8 PM in the Physics Lounge "Electron Nuclear Double Resonance of Biomolecules" presented by Dr. Charles Scholes «•» « * • * . HTtkl. "* The company says it wants to replace the cats with human ratcatchers. I he union, however, insists that cats aren't sleeping on the job: it claims that the rat output is simply increasing faster than the cats can kill them. Scientists in the Physics Department speaking on their research, presented at an undergraduate level to give interested students an understanding of research techniques and what is involved in research. i tand, by ifcriiaasj—I tafia* • * A BLUE, BLUE WHALE LECTURE SERIES aWbusto ^ " ^ CAT NAP A labor union in England has taken up the cause of .10 cats who have been accused of lying down on the job. The Longshoremen's Union in Manchester has begun high-level talks with management representatives after management cut off the cuts' food allowance of SI6a week, saying that the cats weren't catching enough rats. The Society of Physics Students announces a _ * * ^ ^ V SIGNATURE . mm A . a m a s . _ - _ - > . • - . . . 00IAC HEW •"Super Ionic Conductors"- Dr. H. Story •"A Solidstate Theorist Looks at Hemoglobin"- Dr. T. P. Das •"Some Fast Neutron Experiments"- Dr. R. Benenson • "Some Demonstrations & Discussion of Sound and Ultrasound"- Dr. J Check the ASP for listings of future lectures "WsaiJOnO TOOR* INC. noutiarthanDadd^ Ml FUti **•„ N M Hark, N.V. 10017 Caravan to Miami this **ym*»mjmm*mtlmmf*m»mm»*m-... ... CI ' • l " « t m l o * a d a i » , m a » M ( p * p ( r m ) t o r 7 •Ooubto occupancy - balanca dut 150.90 DTripk* occupancy -balanca due $139 90 O Quad occupancy - balance dm (117.80 D Entire payment anctoaad H a m nan m, m*mm*K\ and M p l a i n msmU In: NAME AOORESS " CITY. -STATE. -ZIP . COLLEQE SUNV ALBANY pnnfir. show g o t gtiaf V * » « « m • # Limited Seating For information call: 457-5219 ALSO AVAILABLE I ded bv student association m funded ALBANY STUDENT PRESS DELUXE ACCOMMODATIONS AT MIAMI'S DESERT INN - on the ocean W CAM. NOW AS OUR TICKETS ARE EXTREMELY LIMITED. PLANE TICKETS MUST BE RESERVED BEFORE THANKSGIVING VACATION. CALL 457-7723 or 457-7722 bus ticket? available tor $69 PAGE SEVEN IflliiHIIKitmHnill mtnwwmtmiimtHtfiHHHUMMiHimHror^ THE STUDENT BUYING POWER CARD "" « -«" 8).™<l « I : J •»- '' ;-'' —.'---- NOTIONAL — ' — " " UNITY e * M T | | VCH.UMI « B J By ED MOSF.R party.., to engage in armed struggle Black playwright, poet and to usher in the dictatorship of the political activist Imamu Amiri proletariat." Speaking in lecture hall Baraka (formerly LeRoi Jones) 18 to an audience of over one huncalled Thursday night for the dred people, Baraka further building of a new "Leninist-Marxist demanded the establishment of a ,','•-, - •, &<* >' 94 2 **?*.' W$, C^t-T §ffcETCH *> YOUR DOLLARS BOOK HOUSE STUYVESANT PLAZA 489-4761 s I Strawberry Patch * § * Si Si Boutique St Si K Si Si Si 67 Central Ave. 463-3590 Notice the student discount applies to SALE books through November Mnfll u ?AHDS STATIONARY, JWowtjithnerchandtse except special sale items. 0 fla//.r 10 to 6 Thurs. till 7 Si Si St Si * | 60 Var.et.es of Papers . Turquoise Jewelry W gLargest Selection of Pipes .Posters • Hundreds of « £ » R.ngs . Incense Plants . Bamboo Doorway Beads w S1 - „ m ffona tmert ° ' h«ndte except special sal* item* ' >8 kupftrbarg During hit lecture, Baraka called for the eatabllihment of a unified Communist party and a separate Black nation. CAPITAL DISTRICT TOWING INC. Your Complete Auto Service Center An International / 0 % Discount on Labor with S.B.P.Card Olympia SEP electric typewriter versatile...durable...portable !. 1 i | tfhalaM ttsftaV^ Bto«a* DaeataM **t a t * a^aV A Black Writer Gives Marxist Vision i^-^Sh^t- J „ » H i X * " ' fyJ**f?PZ ? • * ' " b r o u « h t , 0 " » , , u d e n , » by SA. It is sponJn?kl ftu v " r i % ? f ' « " ? » t h r o u g h o u t the Albany area that offer discounts ?«™. h . i "."f^I 1 " ,c a0r d J f M ' W f ll,Ucl W y oHive received yourcard, then use itl mce (n , 0 ch k nin pick a « T Weekend By DAN GAINES I worry about the world, but Saturday night made me feel better. Most people cannot carry on a conversation with more than ten per cent of the rest of the world. Actions that are sins in one society are heralded in another. One right or kind of justice is important in one place, another right or si-nse of justice important elsewhere. We arc very different. It's a wonder we cooperate at all. But it's to our advantage to cooperate, and fortunately most countries realize this. There arc many arguments about the best way to cooperate, and about who's gelting the best of whom, but everyone agrees they should cooperate. The countries of the world do all kinds of things to understand each other so they can cooperate in fighting the world's problems. One of the things they do is send students to study in each others' countries. Sometimes there are students from many countries all attending a school in a country foreign to them. Sometimes all these students join together to form a group to make each other more comfortable, to increase their ability to learn about the country they are studying in, and to increase the ability of st udents native to that country to learn about the international students. At SUN Y-Albany, there is such an •international Students Associa- NOVEMBER 23, 1976 separate black nation. Baraka traced the need for a new radical party to an alledged "sellout" of blacks by the American i Communist Party in the 1930's. He claimed the Party abandoned its one time advocacy of a "self determining black nation of the South" in its efforts to establish a broad 'liberal front' against Nazi Germany. The American Communist Party became "completely revisionist" as had, Baraka said, its counterpart in the "imperialist socialist Soviet Union." The activist felt the black political movement in America underwent similar "revisionism", or dilution of radical principle. Haraku saw civil rights leaders Roy Wilkinsand Martin Luther King Jr. as "spokesmen of the black bourgeosie", in effect lending support tothc white establishment. The only difference between the white and black bourgeosie, said Baraka, is that "one sells AfroSheen, the other Vaseline." The writer praised Malcolm X, the slain black nationalist, as a leader who offered a radical political alternative based upon the "black working class" as opposed to the bourgeosie. Baraka supported Malcolm X's policy of "self-defense" over King's supposed advice of "turn the other cheek until you don't have any checks left." Baraka's feelings seemed to have changed little since he wrote a poem in praise of Malcolm X eleven years ago: '...black man, quit whining and S8HW8P® kupferberg Imamu Amiri Baraka speaking in LC 18 last Thursday. stooping, for all of him, For Great Malcolm a prince of the earth, let nothing in us rest, until we avenge ourselves for his death, stupid animals that killed him...' Barakajustilied H. Rap Brown's violent dictum " 'if it (society) don't turn around, burn it to the ground'", saying that in the United Slates a peaceful transition to Communism is impossible. "Will a Rockefeller or a Mellon wake up one morning and give the state away?" he asked rhetorically. "Capitalism cannot be worked with, message. Confusing? capitalism must be smashed." It's confusing, but much less so Baraka justified black secession than if the show was never per- on the grounds that American blacks formed. When made aware of meet Stalin'sdelinition of a nation as cultural variation, we also reali/.e having a separate common what all people have in common. language, economic life and culture. Political differences are all the He also condemned the United newspapers report, but not all there Stated world power status for being is. he said built upon the slave trade. I left International Night ina pleaI'he best path towards revolution, sant, hopeful mood. I still worry said the writer, was through the foiabout the world. mation of a united Marxist party. But not as much. "The act of uniting Marxist- Festival tion." This past Saturday evening, lliey held their major event of the year, International Night. The audience at Page Hall was entertained by eleven acts performed by different groups of international sludents and performed with sometimes, their American friends. International Night serves an important function for ISA, and it is invariably entertaining as well. Yet its role as a facilitator for increased international understanding is its most distinctive quality. When a Soviet exchange student sings folk songs from his homeland, the audience feels closer to him. When he sings Bob Dylan's Bbwin' In the Wind, the audience is struck by the significance of Dylan's lyrics By STEPHEN E1SENMAN reaching beyond our borders. When The elements that form a good he finishes with a song he wrote chamber ensemble, individual himself, the audience begins to feel proficiency, knowledge of the they know him. And because they literature, and musical teamwork, know him, they know more about require years of constant practice the Soviet Union. and performance. Perhaps the I he different styles of each act Manhattan Trio, together a scant 6 Saturday night made it very easy to years, are still growing. Judging by enjoy. The variation was more than the performance Sunday at Page just interesting; it was an illustration Hall, there were signs that these of the world as it really is today. three might one day achieve Irish folksongs are sung by un greatness.Yet their occasional Irish exchange student and twoensemble and intoualional problems Americans. Black Americans per- resulted in an unsatisfying afternoon form in African Dance and Drums, of music, in this the second Universi"Burundi". There are Spanish songs, ty Celebrity series concert. Chinese instrumental, a German The performers, Ariana itronnc, Choir. No two pieces are exactly violin, David Wells, cello, and alike. No iwo pieces have the same Joseph Seiger, piano, all have il- . ¥ :\ Leninists wins the advance to Communism,"said Baraka, who warned however of "sham Marxists." The lecturer called Angela Davis a "fifth columnist of the Soviet Union" and lambasted " Bakuninistanarchist Eldridge Cleaver." Throughout the speech Baraka spoke in Marxist terminology, sometimes using the exact quotes from Communist authorities. At on point he cited Lenin in speaking of imperialism as the "highest form of capitalism", a system in which an imperialist nation alledgedly uses the "super-profits" it rips out of colonial countries to "bribe a sector of its own working class." Baraka's Marxist rhetoric about 'contradictions' and 'the dialectic' was often exceedingly hard to follow. In the question and amwer period alter the lecture, a person asked Baraka if he shouldn't try to make his point of view more understandable to his listeners. Baraka somewhat lamely replied that propaganda isn't always understood the "first time it is tried out." The Manhattan Trio Misses Mark l u s t r i o u s inusical backgrounds. Bronnc, the daughter of the famous violin teacher, Raphael Bronstein, demonstrated some technical virtuosity. Unfortunately recurring intonation problems and a sallow tone seriously marred her performance. David Wells, the recipient of a number of inusical awards, is on the faculty of Manhattan and Hartt Schools of Music. He was in fine form on Sunday. His playing was virtuostic and energetic. As such, he occasionally overpowered the other performers, especially Mr. Seiger al the piano. Joseph Seiger wus for many years accompanist to violinist Mischa Llman. Certainly this enabled him to perfect his pianissimo technique. ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Unfortunately this was insufficient, especially in the performancy of Brahms, where a rich and powerful sound is needed. The major work of the program was Johannes Brahms' Trio in C major. The opening Allegro, though agitated, lacked real color. Major ensemble difficulties were evident here too. A lack of richness in the violin could be discerned in the Andante, though David Wells on cello performed brilliantly. The final allegro perked up a bit, but too late to save a generally lackluster performance. The first half of the program consisted of Loeilett's Sonata for Violin, Cello and Piano and Dvorak's Trio in B flat major, PAGE NINE tmntw WMIUMW* iimimKmmm&&iBittK&&BmwMKis*i*f>***mtw™ ittlU'tiiMtl,,.Uliiti V" comment guest opinions message to the mayor Editor's Note: SA President Steven DlMeo sent the following letter to Albany's Mayor Erastus Coming. Dear Mayor Corning: I can't begin t o express t o you just how angered 1 am over the fire that occurred at 48 A D o v e Street this past Wednesday. Thank God n o one was killed in this blaze although a very serious injury was sustained by a S U N YA student. What really causes my blood t o boil is the lack o f concern that this city has shown over the enforcement of its housing codes. It simply appalls me to see that this city government, which is supposed t o represent a n d protect t h e people of Albany, only shews a benign neglect for their welfare a n d safety. T h e actions by t h e city in imp r o v i n g a n d enforcing its housing codes border o n non-feasance. H o w m a n y fires of this nature is the city of A l b a n y going go have? H o w m a n y people have t o lose their lives before something is done? It's quite apparent that the building at 48 A Dove Street, as well as other local buildings, d o not meet the code s t a n d a r d s enacted by the city. Why have laws unless they a r e going t o b y enforced? My C o d , I'm a n elected representative of the student body, m a n y of which ( a p proximately 4,000) live in your city. I will not tolerate any government o r agency which is negligent in their duties, especially when the welfare a n d safety of these students a r e at stake. We, as students, are part of this community. We are-large financial investors which in the end helps add t o the city coffers. I spoke to you before about the possibility of having Student Dwellings Inc. take the initial steps toward investing in Albany. We would like t o buy older buildings, rehabilitate them with federal funds, and then rent them out t o students. We have made outstanding progress in that area and are now prepared to begin by buying two buildings. We d o care about the community. We wish to preserve the rich historical heritage of this fine city. We also want t o contribute to the future o f this city by showing people our genuine support. All we ask from you is to show the same faith and concern towards us, as residents of Albany. I wish t o apologize for m y rather blunt feelings over this issue. However, I'm deeply disturbed a n d troubled when such events, which could have been prevented, take place. Respectfully, Steven D i M e o President Student Association court action only hope T o the Editor: I'd like t o wish a speedy recovery t o the six persons injured in the fire at 48A Dove Street. 1 would hope that S A and its lawyer offer the students involved their fullest s u p p o r t in bringing a civil suit for the a p p a r e n t negligence of these landlords. A successful court action may well be off- wheel, w e , the Enlightened Ones, denounce pleasure! We will boycott movies, boycott campus students' only significant hope of music, restoration of Albany rental unit* in compliance with New York State building codes, Our local authorities clearly seem t o lack zeal in bringing such corrective measures to pass. If criminal proceedings are not brought in regard t o this tragedy, or if building inspections and improvements d o not markedly increase, I suggest that N Y P I R O a n d others make Albany a target area for affirmative a c tion on the inadequacy of student housing, The health and safety of the community will not be restored by apologies. Todd O . Burger Away pleasure! A w a y happiness! Away smiles a n d laughter! We'll have n o more of you. for we have seen y o u for what you are! N o w , quickly gather u p your books, take pen and paper, a n d away t o your rcftms, lock the d o o r s , a n d t h r o w a w a y the key. <JU quickly n o w , before They invent some newer, viler ploy t o distract o u r innocent minds. Study, s t u d y . . . a n d when the time is right, however far off that m a y be, we will emerge, to claim our rightful kingdom. We shall ride on the crest of t h e Almighty curve, we shall elaimthe A ' s , we shall be showered with acceptance letters, a n d we shall have become competitiveW pre-med monsters' mission To the Editor: There's a conspiracy on this campus. Oh, 1 know you haven't noticed. . .few have. You see, it's an insidious sort of conspiracy, the kind that seeps into your life, never drawing much attention, just becoming a part. Before you realize, you're perfectly comfortable with it, you begin to enjoy it, you actually take part in a conspiracy against yourself! What is this insidious conspiracy? Patience . . . let me state my case. Have you ever noticed that early Thursday evening, just when you arc beginning to think of a weekend spent in ardent study, you begin t o notice signs posted all over campus, persuasive signs, enticing signs, all coyly attempting t o persuade your good-intentioned, but somewhat slothful, mind to let your studies slip into the background just for a few hours? C o m e t o the movies, they say, come to the theatre, come to the concert, come t o relax, t o enjoy, t o . . . Ah ha! They've got you; all is lost. Now, you'll stay up late, sleep laic next morning, a n d just when you're head begins t o clear, why, there are more signs, lots more, promising bigger and better entertainment for today, tonight, tomorrow . . . Sometime Sunday night, you begin to come round . . . the last of the signs, whose promises have already entered the realm of the past, blow around your feel. You hold your aching, pleasure-soaked head between your hands, and survey with tired, blood shot eyes the dregs of a wasted weekend . . . not just a weekend, but another weekend, another weekend in an endless string of wasted weekends, stretching back as far as your reeling mind can remember. And tomorrow's Monday, another Monday. A cold, clammy chill runs down your spine, a vile taste rising in your m o u t h , your palms begin to sweat, your head spins . . . "Never again!" you scream. Ah, but deepdown, you know that scream is hollow; unconsciuosly, you've already begun to look forward to the next Thursday night But 1 said conspiracy didn't I? Oh, yes! C o n spiracy it is! We've been had! This is no chance series of events; it is a design, a plan, drawn up by the most cunning, calculating, singleminded group of individuals ever brought together to achieve a common goal, and that goal is your downfall, my downfall, our downfall! It is a plan drawn up by them, executed by them, t o benefit only them! And who are "They?" Haven't you guessed yet? Who on this campus have the most t o gain by your downfall? Who's success depends on your failure? Who knows no morals save their own? W h o would spit in your test tube?! YES!! That's right! It's "Them!" The Pre-Med Monsters!! Who else could be as cunning, who could be us cold, who could be as insidious? Drawing us away from o u r studies with sweet sounding pleasures, while they lock themselves up in their towers, feeding on their books, from "SO, THERE'S A/0 HEAT, AND THE ROOF LEAKS -you GOT A GkEhT VIM OF THE SOOTH mill" _. tiers Thursday'till Monday, getting the j u m p on us all! Vile creatures! But now we know, and will no longer be looled! We have seen the truth, and shall unite our strength. Arms locked, shoulders to the mm I v. boycott drink, conversation, Sex' J.M. Reilly openness questioned . . T o the Editor: Wednesday, Nov. 17, saw the relui n, Kllldent activism t o the S U N Y A campus ' ntnrtunately, it also saw the end stuiktii intclligcnce in dealing with major issues I Incase in point was the meeting of the I llli.-lslll C o m m u n i t y Council t o discuss the pus hilm of Security officers carrying guns I was not present for the beginning ul the meeting, but the brief period 1 witnessed u , i shambles. Between the confusion nl the meeting adjourning for lack of quorum, and the rabble rousing of a fewstudents. u v,u* impossible t o make any sense ul the entire proceeding. It was outrageous thai the I < (' could think of m a k i n g il a closed nieerinji However, it was, and still is, more outrageous to think that s h o u t i n g and ihrcale iik' members of the meeting could li positive effect. Hopefully, there will be anoih, ni-ii meeting of the U.C.C. on this issue mid be important for students to attend. However, emotional outbursts leadloemutinn.il retiuu, and accomplish nothing. They even pusc i hindrance t o students arguments In the future, il would be a p p r o p r i a t e il student involvement would he coupled witii students' use of their higher education. Mitchell Wcinei Central Council Itep Indian <<lu.nl and emotions inflamed To the Editor: T h e issue of whether c a m p u s security shall be allowed t o carry guns affects every student directly. It is a n emotional issue, one which most students a r e very concerned annul It <>• therefore very i m p o r t a n t thai students arc able t o listen to the discussion I heu questions, and voice their opinions in .in open manner. On Wedncsduy, Nov. 17, the \U\\\ C o m m u n i t y Council, a committee "I lb • I i iversity Senate, was scheduled to meet In d cuss, and possibly make a recommend on, the proposal. About 21) coiu.eiii' students showed up, myself included I i" entering the conference room, we neiv i formed by the committee chairpct«'fl I' ,1 In Uuchalter, that the committee fell » private discussion regarding wltcihc nil-Ills the meeting should he open to the present. In other words, they warned in discuss, in a closed session, whether in mil ' " B " into a closed session, something clcarl) "' vidlation of any committee rules ol ordei * c were then told the meeting would nut begin until we nil left. The issue of whether security officers shall be allowed to carry guns is l o o Imptiriiinl '<» he UimmuuimtuumiUMMti viewpoint decided behind closed doors, in secrecy. Concerned students must not be excluded from the decision making process. Worse y e t , M s . Buchalter wouldn't even allow us t o discuss whether o r not o u r a t t e n d a n c e should be permitted. Ms. Buchalter's actions have seriously damaged the credibility of her committee, and the Senate itself, but m o r e t h a n that, they have needlessly inflamed e m o t i o n s a b o u t a n already emotional issue. David Gold Central Council Representative Dutch Quad development desired To the Editor: I refuse t o j u m p e n the "Crucify Marc Henecke b a n d w a g o n " on the grounds that nothing positive will come from it. Those w h o call for justice seem t o feel t h a t criminal action is the only rectifiable means. Society dictates that those w h o commit criminal acts will be punished by the laws of society. But a r e societal laws true justice? C a n we punish someone lor their wrongdoings a n d actually leel we have done something positive for society? Does this make one feel internally rewarded? I do not believe this is true justice. I believe ihat true justice will be attained when youth development has occurred. Youth development cannot happen in a penal institution. It happens when one internalizes his own values, knowing when one dues wrong, and avoiding il the next lime. Beneeke cooperated with ofhcials in telling them the aspects of his crime, and this shows a sign ol Ins development. He has been punished, tu a certain extent, a n d what he has taken he must put back. Wouldn't the only positive outcome ul this situation be to see il Marc Beneeke could develop and become a contributing member ul society. •sasMa^' I concepts." I believe the letter speaks for itself. It is a bona fide request for opinions a n d advice a n d is in no way a device t o favor a n y preconceived a p p r o a c h . As a matter of fact, at the date of this writing, the Committee has not yet taken any position on the best way of producing a liberally educated person. Furthermore, the Committee will m a k e its report public at the same time it submits it l o President Fields. This is construed by both President Fields and the Committee as proof of the independence of its work. Although the official deadline has passed. 1 strongly urge you t o take this o p p o r t u n i t y t o shape your own future by offering your ideas on what a liberal education should be. Please write to me: Ray Ortali (French) H U 2 2 3 . t o Ira Z i m m e r m a n (Undergraduate S t u d e n t ) . Dutch Q u a d , P . O . box 135. or to a n y other member of the Committee: Stephen D e L o n g (Geology) ES3I2. Ruben hrey (Undergraduate Studies) A D I I 2 . Burt Levy I Music) PAC2I6, Frederick Moore (French) HU240, Hajimu Ogawa ( M a t h e m a t i c s ) ES121, Maurice Richter (Sociology) SS358, Richard Teevan (Psychology) SS233. Marianne Williams (Anthropology) SS.174. Rav Ortali frat fun To the Editor: I am writing in response to Mitchell Canter's letter ol Nov. 12 about my c o l u m n . "Normal Everyday Ciuys." Mr. C a n t e r begins by saying "Satire at the expense of others is not funny." Apparently he does not know that the definition of satire according to Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary is "a literary work holding up human vices and lollies to ridicule or scorn." Through satire, a u t h o r s have atlempted to humorously point out the absurRemember, "the quality ol mercy is not dities and ridiculousness of various people and si rained." institutions. Therefore, it is impossible to Gary Lukacik wrile such a work without offending someone. The thing I was poking fun ul in my article was the letter I received Irom Theta Xi O m e g a , more so than the fraternity itself. If "a lot work went into the writing of that letter." as Mr. Canter states, then il wasn't enough. If I receive a letter Irom an organization asking me t o join, and Ihe letter puts down people who choose not t o join because of their own To lh» Editor: personal leelings, then that turns me off, a n d A letter t o "1-aculty. Students and Adcertainly does not reflect kindly on the ministrators ol the College of Arts and organization. Sciences," sent to all student organi/alions on Mr. Canter phoned me the d a y the article campus, has apparently not found its way lo was printed to ask if I'd ever been to a frat parthe student body, since, at the date ol this ty. When I said "no", he mumbled "finejourwriting (Nov. 18), not one single student on nalism" and hung up. Since he did not ask ihis campus has taken the opportunity offered anything else about the article (such as why I by the "President's Special Committee lo wrote it), and did not stay on the phone to disReview the Undergraduate Experience" lo excuss it, this can only lead me to believe he has a press an opinion on the luturc ol liberal arts closed mind and is not very interested in education at the University al Albany. somebody else's opinion. Kor this reason, as chairperson ol the ComMr. Canter further states that my article mittee, I should like logive the students on this never would have been printed il it dealt with a campus another opportunity 10 read Ihc essen"cultural g r o u p " rather than a fraternity. It tia] parts of the original letter: seems a little silly to me to compare a cultural "This committee has been appointed by group with a lung, colorful heritage t o a President Fields t o reassess Ihc concept ol a selected hunch ol guys who are together liberal arts education at Ihe I'niversrly at because they all managed lo pass the initiaAlbany. tion. II Mr Canicr resents his frat being "I he purposes of this letter arc, lirsl, to seek satirized, he and his brothers shouldn't leave advice from the academic cumin unity on whai Ihemscfvcs so open to ridicule. it perceives l o be Ihe goals ol the liberally I apologize if I have presented an unfair piceducated person and, second, lo help ulcniilv lure ol Iral members, bul I lind it a little hard alternative avenues to reach these goals. tu change my beliels when the Poller's Club is "The committee believes Iherc is no 'one singing Christmas carols outside my window best'curriculum, but rather there should be a al three a m . as they did Saturday night. continuing search and tuning lo capture lire David G o l d m a n changing concepts ol education, l o r instance, one avenue Irequently suggested i» ihc The Albany Student Press welcomes letters rccstablishment of distribution requirements lo the editor tellers must be typewritten, triple-spaced, and sinned. Names will he This is certainly one alternative, bul there are withheld on request. Please bring ur send others as well. We solicit your assistance in Inters in Campus Center Room J29 by discovering these alternatives. Wednesday fur publication in the Friday "As the process develops, we will he back in m u r and by Sunday for the Tuesday issue. touch with you l o summarize OUI emerging editorial Dollars For Dwellings Twenty thousand dollars of Student Association funds have been earmarked for Student Dwellings, Inc., and will be used with other monies to purchase and renovate a building or two for student housing. With 15,000 students attending SUN Y A, and a significant proportion affected by the housing crunch, the addition of housing for nine to 24 students in downtown Albany may not seem to be much of a dent in the problem. By itself, such an analysis is correct, but Student Dwellings can be part of a successful campaign to loosen the housing crunch. An equal investment in lawyer's time would also help. If SA financed a series of lawsuits against local landlords who are defying various regulations and ordinances, landlords throughout the capitol district would pay heed to student housing problems. An investment in offcampus services could be made to help off-campus students deal with their landlords and with other housing problems. The Off-Campus Student Association has created whole systems to serve these students. This should be expanded to include twenty-four hour emergency help, information services and advice. Off-Campus housing remains a problem. The university is incapable of housing ail its students, and yet continues to play a minor role in helping those students uho choose to live off campus. Student Duellings is a project that should have come from the administration, but SA presently has available funds; the university does not. Student Dwellings also represents a committment to the community by SA. showing the people of Albany that even though students may come and go. they are willing to make a permanent investment in the city. Student Dwellings is a start; combined with other programs for offcampus students it could instigate a much-needed renaissance in offcampus living. Quote of Ihe Day: II vou co long cnouch without a bath even the fleas — ti- jrld War Wl 1 letvou alone. Ernie Pyle in "Here Is Your War" // correspondent reviewing your experience MASTHEAD STAFF EDITOR IN CHIEF STEPHEN DZINANKA MANAGING EDITOR N(WS EDITOR ASSOCIATE MWS EDITORS . PRODICTION MANAGE* SPENCE RAGOIO CVNTHU HACINLI BRVAN HOLZBERG, JONATHAN HoDCES, THOMAS MAITEU.0 PATRICK MCGLYNN ASSOCIATE PRODICTION MANAGER ELLEN FINE EDITORIAL PACES EDITOR ARTS & FEATURES EDITOR JOYCE FEIGENBALM MATTHEW KAL'FMAN SPORTS EDITOR MIKE PIEKARSKI ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR ED MOSER ADVERTISING MANAGERS LISA B i t s DO, DANIEL GAINES ASSOCIATE ADVERTISING MANAGER BRIAN CAHILL f LA«iniD-<.R\mTt MANAGER EILEEN DLGGAN BisiNEi.s MANAGE* MICHAEL ARDAN Staff »ruen Bruce Conaofh. loci Feid. Paul Rosenthal. Hone Sheruer A P & Zodiac %<•«« Altec kafen, Robert Kwana Prtite* Sane) Envcrvon Billing accountant Carol Cotras Payroll manager Eilen F.rvt Composition manager: EMeo Bo:sen Composition production. Jell Aronowiu. Went Pteiffer. Amy Sour* Production. Renni Aitman. Mar« Arttind, SaII> Ann Brecher. Karen Cooper. Leslie Etsenstein. Irene Ftrmai, lorn Giants, Soils Jagmi. Vjcki kun/man. Laurw Lesko, Denue Mason, Debbie Rieger, Joan SiKtrblatt. Laurse SlocmeU, Stu Vincent, Jod\ Wilner Advertising production Joyce Betza, Sail) Brecher. keil> Kiu, Debbie Kopf, Janet Meunicr, Meg Roland Administrative as-ustant. Miie Forbes Graphics ioordinator Stephen Almast Photograph). >uppt«;d principalis b) I nrverat) Photo Service and members of CamcraCiub ESTABLISHED 1916 Ihc Alban* Student Press u published e\t*) Tuesday and Friday during the school yea/ except hotuta M Editorial policy is the responsibility of the Edttor-m-Chief, and is subject to review by the Mauhead S.aff Mam office Campus Center room 32V. Telephone: 457^392. Address mad to: Albany Studeul Press. CC J29, 1400 Washington A\enue, Albany. Sew York 12221 mumm <tW - • « * cmwi STUNS POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Israeli Awareness: Just YOE Eft imriM ts M Mhnfrits^ VOLUNTKR PHONE COUNSELOR DR. VASSOS KARAGEORGHIS The position otitis an excellent opportunity for a per•on intemtod In saort tern crisis intervention, in development of counseling skills, and in employment in a dynamic and creative human service organization. QUALIFICATIONS I Current enrollment in SUNYA u a freihman, sophmore, or junior. 2. Willing involvement in the in-service training program. - DUTIES OF VOLUNTEER I• 2. 3. 4. 5. Attendance' at the initial training weekend at the beginning of the semester. Working on a 3 hour telephone shift weekly. Working 3-4 (12 hour) weekend shifts a semester (including overnight) Attendance at 2 three hour training groups each month. Attendance at occasional workshops run by Middle Earth and other agencies. 6. Commifment to providing quality counseling services. "Recent Archaeological Discoveries in Cyprus" Dr. Karageorghis is Director of the Department of Antiquities of the government of Cyprus. He is also Adjunct Professor of Classical Archaeology at the State University of New York at Albany. He is the holder of many international honors in recognition of his outstanding work in the field of Cypriot archaeology. His most recent (1976) book is entitled The Civilization of Prehistoric Cyprus. He has conducted excavations most recently at Larnaca, the ancient Citium. Interested persons should contact Middle Earth for an application. Inquiries should be addressed to: Charlie Biss, Switchboard Coordinator. No applications will be accepted after November 29th at S p.m. MIDDLE EARTH RM. 102 SCHUYLER HALL DUTCH QUAD 457-7588 Do not miss this unusual opportunity. iV* Monday, November 29, 1976 8:00 PM Lecture Center 23 »\* D O N T BE A SKI CASUALTY! SPEAKERS fORUm and ALBANY STATE CINEfTlR " Join to pr*)t*)nt a scionc* fiction fantasy THINK SNOW BY 9" Croator of Huk-A-Poos, Bagels, Nose Jobs, and Poodles by Tom Scherbtnko Two weeks ago was "Israel Awareness Week". When a friend of mine heard this, she replied "As if people on this campus weren't aware of Israeli" But for anyone who wasn't, there were movies, speeches, and even a table, complete with slide show, in the Campus bj Robtft E. Gray, Jr. Catholics to the chosen few who display eight Center. The discovery of the JAP was made by Sir inch chais on their chests. The research team Anyone who attended any of these events Thomas Aquinas and his cronies back in the determined that JAPS are not necessarily af- probably expected some sort of enlightenearly 1400's. One night, they became, bored filiated with any specific religion or race; they ment, such as why Israel is so chummy with with playing pinochle and eating egg salad come in all different sizes and colors (thanks to the avowedly White-supremist regime in sandwiches, so they began to indulge in the an- Cover Girl). South Africa; or whether or not the reports cient riddle game. As the lights were dimmed. • that the European-Zionist ruling class treats Sir Thomas put forth this enigma for his conSeveral criteria were set up for aid in iden- the Oriental Jews as second-class citizens are temporaries to solve; tifying a JAP. Unfortunately, these standards true. Unfortunately, these matters received lit"What has eyes, yet does not see? have not yet been perfected, as evidenced by tle attention. What has ears, but does not hear? the fact that the team included several of the Even the timing of all this "awareness" is What has a nose, still does not smell? trees behind Campus Center as potential sub- paradoxical. Just a few days before, Israel inWho makes Panasonic?" jects for intensive study. One of the most com- formed visiting American congresspeople that His comrades were stumped. Sir Thomas ex- mon characteristics is the ability shared by all they could not receive any "awareness" conclaimed "A JAP!", and chuckled heartily to JAPS, to keep their noses constantly pointed cerning the possible manufacture of A-bombs. himself. No one else thought this was very at the North Star without ever tripping over Regrettably, the Congress-tour was in Iran at clever, but Sir Thomas was ahead of his time anything, though they have been known to the time of SUNYA's "Awareness Week" and anyway. walk all over people in this state. This has been therefore could not visit here to gather inforThroughout the Dark Ages, the J APS kept attributed to some sixth sense. Several JAPS mation on that subject. But that would have fairly well hidden, posing as apothecaries and have explained this uncanny phenomenon received little attention anyway. (Remember dromedary merchants. With the beginning of along the lines of "The Divine Right of Kings." when it was the "Communist" countries who the Renaissance, however, JAPS began to It has been confirmed that there are absolutely wouldn't let foreigners inspect things? I supcome out of the closet, which necessitated the no existentialists in this clique. Conversation pose this is another "proof that radical invention of the Huck-A-Poo and led to among J APS is restricted to their best friends' Zionists can use in their argument that Israel is various other cultural advancements such as sexual adventures, how to apply mascara to a socialist state!) get that "battered woman" effect, and how bagels, nose jobs, and small white poodles. The "awareness" presented is about a "small Alter that golden era, the JAP's story was many people they managed to snub that day. country" with a "dedicated population." We not a fruitful one, until the mid-sixties when a "Snubbing" has, indeed, become a true art hear about courage in the lace of terrorists and shrine was built in Albany for the modern form among JAPS. This is mainly attributed hostile neighbors, but do we hear about the JAP. This fortress is known as SUNYA. (Send to the delusion these poor people arc suffering Stern Gang or the Irgun? We hear about the Us No Young Arabs), and it is here that psy- from. They sec themselves as Chief Walla- Anglo-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt in 1956 or the enormous U.S. arms sales to chologists and other mental health personnel Walla Bird of the Eastern Coast. have come to find out more about this variaIn any case, it pays to be aware of the Israel? finally, there is the plight of Jews in other tion of Homo Sapiens. Their findings arc sur- general attitude prevalent among JAI'S. You prising. There seems lo be a wide assortment may think that thcyure tryingto get you. They countries, how Israel is their only hope. In this case, the enemy who has almost become legenol JAI'S, ranging from those disguised as Irish are trying. Very trying. W v e got what you want. Ralph Bakahl "FRITZ THE CAT" and "HEAVY TRAFFIC Ralph Baluhl will bo bringing hit now movlo WIZARDS which is to bo roloasod in February. Wizards Is a talo of Sword and Sorcery In tho year 2 million A.D. D o w n Hill Ski Conditioning & Safety Session With Ed Gorchinski of West Mountain Tuost., Nov. 30th 5:30-6:30 Gym C X - Country Skiing With Bill Hanson of Trail North Equipment, Waxing, Techniques, Safety Thurs., Dec. 2nd 8:00-8:00 Men's Aux. Gym Both are tree with Student Tax Card L , i ii , miv - — i — i — -i FREE w/tax IX- 7 1.50 General Public Tickets will bo available beginning Thurs. Nov. 16 at lO a.m. In the S.A. Contact Office. We've Got Your Solitaire The Great Smuggler's Notch SKI TRIP is Back!!! Jan 9-14 l^wi 5 Days/Nights of Lilts and Luxurious Lodging !!! $95 00 > INDIVIDUAL FIKPMCES •KJTCHEH FACIUIIES lewd Box DMUOW IMCUUSTS rcn ovtn eo turn Northway Mall Shopping Center Albany N.V.1220S 51M59-289H • In too many cases the facts and the "awareness" are out of sync; Soviet Jewry is only one. On the Palestinian refugee issue, respected journalists like Erskine Childers have time and again demonstrated that the source of the problem lies in the initial terrorism of various Zionist "freedom fighter" groups, but no matter how much documentation, it seems the only "awareness" that ever comes to us is the same old emotion-based stuff, clipped off from reality. The problem for us is that all this "awareness" is SA funded, "your tax dollars at work". Misconceptions and distortions are continually served out, using money which undergraduates must pay. Hut, alter all, this is nothing new in America, where we've paid, seemingly willingly, for years, to be sold and brainwashed on just about everything from Charmin toilet tissue to how everybody here is equal. jmswati®. The basic design idea Is chosen by more brides than any other. A single diamond, simple and elegant. We have solitaires to fit every taste, every budget, In your choice of round, oval, marquise, pear or emerald cut. Whether you spend ffhundred dollars, or thousands of dollars, we'll give you unmatched value lor every dollar you spend. UBO our Custom Charge Plan, BankAmericard, Master Charge or Layaway. J dary is the Soviet Union. Doei my of the "awareness" point out that in 1948 the Soviet Union supported the creation of Israel out of what was once Semitic land (where Arabs and Jews lived together for several millenia)? Or that Stalin's succesor, Malenkov, was Jewish? But the most frustrating thing about the "Soviet Jewry" issue for a certain population of America is the idea of a "special oppression." Few people of Baltic or Ukrainian descent would agree that Soviet Jews are any more oppressed than other minorities in the USSR. If anything, for the Jew in the Soviet Union, there is always that hope of emigrating to Israel; what is the hope of the Estonians or the Georgians, to name only two,'who are increasingly robbed of their culture and language? And furthermore, how "pro-Arab" can the USSR be if it is perfectly agreeable to letting Jews emigrate to Israel, thereby increasing that country's human resources? tSMmiritiM W W JefhnomlHf,V«lMMeS4M Call IRA 465-4277 FRANK 465-0720 hinted by ID. funded by student association _n WORLD PREMIERE!!! Wtd.Dfc.1 9tOO p.m. A Resourceful Country? •—- NOVEMBER 23, 1976 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS PAGE THIRTEEN •uHgmmmmmmtmmm* '"•" Uof, , > Another personal? Mutt be you htefcy week. Misses you In Syracuse. Love, Mltfit Parker Concord stereo cassette deck wHti Dolby. ;' Very (odd condition. Great Christmas gift. $125, Howie, 7-4304. Tap* (lecorder 7" tool Stereo $100. Manager belt electric $35. Both excellent D* Uppal 7-4393 or 785-7888. Joy, Diane, Sarah, Lynda, Mary, You're the crailest people I know. Gonna mist yal SUE Oarrard SI 728 Turntable. Good condition. $40. Call Carol at 464-9343. Shetpshead Babe, You're beautiful. Thanks for bearing with my confusion. Like yo madly, Canartle Kid AMPEX mkra-32, frontloadlna. stereo cossette deck— $40.— Zach 7-4011 SERVICES Trotting Pott Comix • I buy, » f l , and especfaffy trad*. Call Randy at 465-8806. Sopor, heroes a specialty. . learn to Ski! Jlmtny Ptak offers cheap sin and eight week programs. Contact: Rita 71992: ftiwtioooHy U m t a U t f T O "ftoiodtcism* may be your only way out. Call: 7-8938 for expert counclllng. Experienced typist; m a r campui, largo or small jobs. Reasonable rates. Phono 4894a54. , Custom Shirt Printing Any design, lettering. Low rates. Immediate delivery. Lakosido Workshop. 1-494-2734. Musical instruction: Guitar lessons all styles and levels; jazz, drums, organs, mandolin and banjo. 438-5688 Europe 76-77 ABC Student charter flights. Cheapest way to go. Global Travel, 521 Fifth Ave. N.Y. 100)7. Call 212-379-3532. Typing; my home, fast, accurate, reasonable. 462-3808 TYPING— professional, dissertations, manuscripts, etc. Limited pickup • delivery, reasonable. Call Pat 765-3655. HEADS— U.S. Bongs and mora at discount. Send self-addressed stamped envelope to Shady Deal, Box 1501, Green Island, N.V. 12183 Daddy O'l Bar— Restaurant Wants you at 124 Washington Ave., draft beer— great food—mixed drinks. ' Jan. 12, 1977. Italian Alps $575. Contact John Morgan 457-6515 IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD Announcement; limited openings remain of CFS accredited Spring 1977 Academic Year Programs commencing Spring Trimester. Early acceptance it now open for Fall 7 7 , Winter, Spring 7 8 or Full Year 7 7 7 8 in Moscow, Salamanca, Paris, Dijon, ,t F l o r e n c e , Perugia, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Vienna, Geneva, England for qualified applicants in languages, all subjects inct. Int'l law, business. All students in good standing eligible—Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, Seniors, Grads. Good faculty references, self-motivation, sincere interest in study abroad, int'l. cultural exchange count more with CFS that grade point. For applications/information: CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY/AY ADMISSIONS DEPT N/216 S. State/Box 606/Ann Arbor, MICH 48107/(313)6625575, < EARN UP TO $3000 PER SEMESTER OR MUCH MOREI Campus Reps wanted to post distribute for commission, lines guaranteed to sell. Agressive, motivated persons. Few hours weekly. Send resume, $2, for job description, info sheets, application forms, postage & handling. Upon acceptance receive coding number, memb. card, work manual free. With first weekly commission check receive your $2 back. WRITE: Nationwide College Marketing Services (NCMS), Box 1384, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106 HI I P W A N T E D Drummer for country-rock type of band needed. You must be good. Stu: 489-1186 or Marc 372-0495. For Sale, pioneer speakers four Way System floor model, mutt be seen and heard, Coll William Perry at 7-5003. Photographer needs models for centerfold confetti and art studies. Release required, call 482-7679 evenings (7-9). BSR 710 Turntable, excellent condition. $100. Call Jeff at 442-0721. Call till ya get Help wanted: someone to proof English papers. Call 7-7763. GE Stereo, AM-FM 2 speakers, $40, 4420385. read HOUSING Senior Female looking to share apartment 185 or lass on busline, call Judy at 434-4141' exi460. Two females looking for apartment/house for spring semester. Near bus, utilities included. Call 472-6768. Share with couple, small bedroom, comfortable, on. busline, all utilities $55/month, evenings—472-9412. Roommate wanted. Quiet upperclass person or graduate student. Near busline $40 plus utilities. 465-1077. Recent SUNY grad looking to live with other females in quiet, clean apartment. Need housing immediately- Call evenings at 4626090. Female house-mate wanted for Spring semester— $85/month, own bedroom, near busline, Call Lisa 465-1652. Roommate with love for life needed, 3 bedrooms, 662 Myrtle Ave., Ed/Geff: 4827887. Mature, cultured gentleman wants room in, or to share rent and expenses of, apartment or house of another person. Ken Diamond 463-2645. RIDE RIDERS Need ride back from Florida by Jan. 8th. Call Doris at 449-8489 after 6 p.m. Ride wanted to Virginia/D.C. area for Thanksgiving. Share expenses, driving, return Sunday. Kathy 472-3324. Ride badly needed to Atlanta or anywhere south over Christmas vacation. Call Marc at 7-3043. Riders wanted to Boston, leaving every Friday after 10 a.m., split charges. Call Steve at 472-7418. Ride wanted back here Sunday 11/28 from Bklyn or Manhattan. Call Andy at 212-9344363 over vacation. Ride needed for three on the West Coast. Leaving December 24, returning around January 15. Call Leah 472-8202 FOR SALE Portraits and caricatures done in charcoal, Portraits—$4,00 Caricatures—$2.00. Ask for Ann 249 Alden 472-7418 TYPING in my home, you must be able to pick up, deliver, reasonable. 283-6395. LEARNING TO DRIVE? Go to Ed Meltzer's Driving School, Wappingers Falls, N.Y. OR coll 472-8748 'Guitar Lotions—Folk, Blues, Classical Ragtime, Beginners, All levels. Export instruction. Call 438-5688, 7 3 Chevy Nova hatchback, 3,400 miles, good buy. Call Lois at 4620385. 1971 Dotsun 510 AM/FM, oir, micheline radiols, 50,000 miles, 26 plus mpg Coll 7855371. 1970 Toyota Corona Delux Automatic excellent new tires. 5750 DR Uppal 7-6393 or 7857888 (evenings). 1969 Peugeot— manual 4-speed, runs O.K., rusted body. $ 1 5 0 or best oiler. Ted 438-3909. Kelly Ave. West—Rock Band Available for parties, Dancet, etc. Coll Jim 489-7313 or Bob 477-8654. Attenlionl '69 Chevy Impala— period condition, except for engine. Will accept best offer (not necessarily regarding car). Call Amy or f.ileen 436-1300. WANTED 1966 ford Fairlane for sale. New teatcoven recently painted, snow tires. Excellent condition. S375.00, 482-8233. 169 MIAMI, roumlirip bus ikketi available. 1965 Chrysler Newport recent tune-up. 2 New tires, call 274-7584 oc 274-6723. Doundtrip and oneway air-travel also. Call 7 7 7 2 2 X-Country Ski Boots, Sire I I , needed Jan. 13-1}. Rent or buy. Call Dan 7-8818. PAGE FOURTEEN . SANYO Quadrophonic stereo: Garrard turntable, 8-track, AM-FM itereo. Excellent condition. 7-5243. Beautiful Fur Jacket. Silver-gray Chinese Kid. Fits small-medium. Very Rare. $45.00. 274-7584. Typing • $.50/page. Call Pat 7850849 SUNYA 6th Annual Ski Tour Jan. 2, 1977- Stereo— sound-design, AM-FM 8-track recorder, auto turntable exc. cond. and sound, $125. Call 785-9487. J450 1964 Volks with 1970 engine. Runt well. Call Bob at 436-8922, Couch and chair for sale. Reasonable condition both for only S15. Coll 436-1689. Mini cassette recorder, new, 3-digit counter, automatic, built in mike: Conn, far ext. mike; earphone, AC-adapter; new $70.00, Sell for $50.00; phone Richard at 7-7435. Robin, Have o nice vacation, too you Sunday. Mark Twain for Mike Berman Frtol Everyone invited! Thanksgiving Day Feast...Eight Stop Coffeehouse...noon to 7 p.m....FREE. Call 434-1202. BlumHappy Turkey Day to my roomie— the biggest turkey of 'em all. Love, Berg Diane— el tlone una cosa peque no. Si o No? Love, A peewee lover My Brown Eyed Girl, Always on my mind— and In my heart. A Fellow Psychologist Juicy, Boy are you everlll Almond Eyes Panasonic 8 track recorder, excellent condition, 575.00. Call Al at 7-7731. "SANYO" Quadrophonic stereo system. One year old. Bast reasonable offer takes it. If interested call 7-5245. Barbara— Do you prefer "French" or "regular" backgammon. Either way it's always interesting. Love— Brenda Technics receiver. Pioneer Turntable, Stanton Cartridge, Fisher Speakers. Excellent condition. Call Todd at 434-8904. Dear broccoli breath, Too many extra innings— Let's change the game. 6 ft. ski's with bindings $35.00 (Used twice), child's ski boots size 3 (New) $7.50. Call Marvin at 489-6977. Ski Boots— "Koflach" brand Men's 8'A M 515.00 brand new conditionl Call Elliott at 436-7370. Radial tires 13" on Pinto rims $55.00 for pair, Call Bob at 436-8922. Cross-country skiis, Bonno with Lignastoneedges (with poles) excellent condition, call 783-5144. Virtually new pair of Earth Shoes for sale. Excellent condition. Purchased too small. Men's size tOVr-U. Price negotiable, call Kenny at 489-4250. New Leather Fashion Boots— rust— size 910, cost me 555. Need money, sell for 535. Jewelry Sale Handcrafted Sterling Silver Jewelry on sale in front of Campus Center. November 22, 23, and 24 and December 6, 7, and 8 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Percentage of proceeds to Telethon 7 7 . Mags— set of 4 ET'S, 2 Cragars, 2 Dotsun Z mags, reasonable. 439-7889. Back issues of Penthouse, best offer, serious inquires only, 489-5670. Records— All excellent condition. Brubeck, Cocker, Guess Who, Elton John, Many more. 52.00 each. 7-4304. Snowshoos— Vermont Tubbs, beaver tails, with bindings, only used twice. RoasonableB 370-2491 ask lor Glenn. Avon— Do your holiday shopping on campus— buy Avon— samples and catalogs available call 7-4673. Love, Goldy Michael, I love you. I don't need reasons-— I know. Isn't love wonderful? Your Turkey Hey Beers) We're glad that you're starting to feel at home. Love and kisses, A and Y P.S. How about another tequila sunrise? on usl Ho-Jo! D cubed— Congratulations! Soon you'll be D to the fourth and someone (me?) will have purple shoes, Love, Babe Marcy C , What do you want to be BLACK or PUERTO Rican? Your Rabbi Teddy, You're the most wonderful woman in the world. LOVE YOU ALWAYS— Ponda. Happy Thanksgiven Dear D.A.I,, I've love you for a year...Please tell mel Love, Mom Maria— You Dol You haven't got much longer to go. Stick it out. I Love You. —Mark 1303 Colonial— You're the best suitemates I could ask for— have a great vacation. SKS Ron, Did somebody say U. Mass? Used pair ol A78 x 13 polyester snow tires with rims. Good condition. Will bargain. 7B855. Two more shopping days until Ed O'Noil Dayl Buy your presents now) Avoid the rush! Pickering XV-IS/400E elliptical phono cartridge, almost new, excellent condition, 512, call Howie, 7-4304. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, EDII See, wo aren't Mertzos after all, Lovo, Cindy and Roberta Hermans Survivor, Boots Size 8 almost new. Julie, A loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and you. Two out of three. — Kevin PERSONALS To the wonderful folks who typed up these personals: thanks, your great. SUNYA More, More, More Wo want Mauri Do you have to go to Boston? Love, Davey Dear Mill: Hare's your very own SUNYA Personal. Have a super Turkeydoy. Love, M. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO "ELUSIVE" MARIA, enchanting star ol "MARY CRAFT GOES TURKEY HUNTIN' IN WHOPPINGERS'," STAN AND PERL ARE CLUTCH. This is the year of the Carbuncle. We deserve it. Sugar Magnolia, Bye & Bye I'll jump for joy cause you've got me HYPNOTIZED. BIGIRON Jackie, Congratulations on your 5th floor backgammon tournament Victory. Keep on winning. 5th floor—Eastman Timmy Alloyno, I didn't liku what you said al the Alden Party 11/12/76. _ D Ann: I wear cute earrings, friends call me "Moon," bo my MoonLady. Lovo, J. Maiorano (434-4141 ext. 1058) Dear Grace: Amazing woman: you taught me how to make a horny bull: Moose Breath To Sydnoy Sheiner's Pal plus to Roogle, I'm renlly sorry— Understand? Stuart Gillin's A prentice ALBANY STUDENT PRESS "* D>inda""fJfouuth—(^IcT/''any " g o o d backgammon lately? Juit curious! love, Barbara and Barbie - 1 DEAR Pooh, Set the extreme you've driven mo to? You faall Lovo, your suite-honey To Ann: Improve your Image and advertising with photos—Check 'Help Wanted' CHIPPY^ From classical white to Lou Reed!?) Hang it Dear John Boy, Times have been rough for me and for you. But my hope and determination still shine through, keep your head up and don't look to the ground. Reassurance should tell you I'M always be around. Love, Mary Lou Gliikkmaannn, Now that you're 20 maybe you'll get laid. Love, The Pussy Bio Major Who's idea was this?(all these personals) Dan Gaines Bogg'n Brut; Happy 21st to one I love more than any other. Love ya, Cindy DKNice try. but no way Shave it off you loser, —Bugs Ai y, ' Sorry I have to work this Thanksgiving. Love me anyway, O.K.? Red Menace Dear Disco Duck, Thanks for the dedications and everything else. Love, The Little Girl Upstairs Bruce and Aich— Have a damn good Thanksgiving! Pig out, Don't eat any bags! Pete Eleanor— You're insane!- - and I love you for it! Miss you lots. Love always, Nora To the Girls with those New Thorn McCanns, I Love You. The Boy from Shoetown ToFBjr. and AR-U's, You're probably sincere but, you AR's are more, they're accurate. Thorens Hey Billy Turkey D„ Tommy, and G.J, Happy vacation. Thanksgiving Joe Tricia, Makuria, Marie— I'm only trying to be friendly. Why not? Often Feared Friend To my G.O.B., When you cut your hair, it'll still bo the samel Your derelict Bunches, Nine months now, Lot's make it nine more, I Lovu You forovor. Kimmykissus TAC, Please fill in the middle, it'll look bolter that way. Love, Bit Tiger, Kiss mo until tomorrow. I hope tomorrow never comos. Christopher Rogers' mother (maybe someday) Bellyn, Feather, Hefty, I'm glad we have oach other .Christmas treo noxt wooklll YAY e.m.y.m. To the guy wilh the long blond hair in Forer's Soc 115. Whore are you? To my Co-Ice Cream Fighter, I'm still mad at youl up! CR or SUITE TONIGHT. DOT Cohen, I realty had nothing to say, but .this was SUCH@>A-Deal. Bin Dear Weezie, A late night studier needs a late night studiee. Love, Dave White David, Brian, and Brian, Get to workl Don't leave it all for me! Still Frustrated Sticky Fab, D.O.Toes and Nose are great. But cherry pop and whiteners are fantastic!!! Gooey Mom, Our J.H. 'notes', piggy-banks during liredrills, and informative sex discussions—It's been great! Naive(?) Number 6, Best of luck in basketball to the cutest "Captured Angel". Kathy The two most Gorgeous guys at Dutch Quad are ERIC LEVINE and HARRY FISHER. Pat, Seventy Six days to complete . , . BOREDOM? Maybe Fredy will bring Paul on his boatl Applications for joining the Nunnery are now being accepted. Contact Sister Erica at 457-4064 Dear Wellington 570, You're the greatest! From one of the many beautiful females that surround you. "Big Red" Eat right, don't look at the menu and remember Albany loves you. Babe , Robin, Now that you've finally gotten sex, please get out of Greg's pants. -Another Beached Whale Dear LDB, I never knew libraries were so much funlll! Love (your little (ool)-K Thanx to everyone: I'll look to the times we'll have together. Love, Mark Zosla, Thanks for dancing with me Saturday night. It was fantastic. Mike Dear Sue, I'll bet you'll never guess who's sending you this personal! Happy Thanksgiving. "ME" To everyone who helped me get by —thanks ond I'll try to return the lavor. Stevo Joy, I Fooled Around and Fell in Love. Andrea, Barb, Sue, Can wo have cookies and Turkey Thursday? Happy Thanksgiving. Gobble, gobble Kathy WIS, I've got bettor things to oat than Fudgotown cookies! Love you. Alan To Larry at "Across the Slroul" on 12/ 13, I caught your eye also, To the special one That keeps me going. To my wife. Now and always YFC To all members of the Such Wheeze Hotel, Have a Happy Thanksgiving! Total Scralurm NOVEMBER 23, 1976 Dear Nancy, I lovo you more than you'll ever know. • /,'., Hero's one for you too and everybody otee Vou'ro the creepiest auy I over mot, ana* i n Pierce, Happy ThanksgMngl may Johnny Cain ttrwo mo aoaa H n o Dot, LN, I told you I would. ~ Mallf (Mate?) Flipped out, let's pick another double, it's not subconscious. Thanks B.F.A. „•;/: Dash Hell Daughter: Welcome to XEO and hope you find the happiness I have. Professor Dr, Golfond: W o appreciate your concern for pasting— We love You. Economics 330 HM—an inky expression of affection from your Phoebe downstairs. Je t'adore. Sherlock— Watson tonight? Dunno— wanna spend a quiet night? —The red headed league "Happy Hitcher": "I got a thumb and she'sason-of-a-bitch." Deb Happy Birthday— Go out and have that one too many tonight. Love, Dino R— Everythin g's perfect?1 301 Ten Eyck To the greatest three that live wilh me. You are the best. Sparky R Fern— Though 1 ignore you, r-ouknow adore you. Phoebe Mark BeneckeDoes this mean I don't get the live bucks you owe me? Neil G.B. I'm not sure, (anticipation?) Anyway, many thanks lor corresponding, it's been a Pleasure. Challis Dear Karen, Thanks for the quarter. Smile. The White Walls lives at 640 a.m. WSUA. Ira Goldstein speaking (or tho While Walls Ira Goldstein speaking once again for the White Walls MoCongratulations on your great interviews. You've got it made. Love, Your roomie Dear Debbie, It's been 3 weeks and 4 days. I never knew growing a beard could be so much fun. Love, Bob from me and Robert love, Patty Eric— A birthday wish | o r someone who has been so much more than just my cousin, but my Iriend as well. With all my love (or a very Happy Birthday, Wendy Saliia: Could you limit your singing lo the shower? From A SEAMAN Dear Barbara, Living with you is an experience I'll never give up. You're the best Iriend and a swell roomale Have a Happy Birthday Love, Laurie Dear Butch Hope to see you on you' feet aguin because we need you oul there Have a hoppy Your "x" inconvenience Invisible Man No. I'm not avoiding you! How can I be when I can't oven see you? Ragdotl Hi Sam. Now that yuui tests are over, you can celebrate! Have a nice Thanksgiving. Oh, Really? You Uttl a munchkin Brian. Is your thing bionoc? Brian, Thanks lot payment lor services renderedyour bill was long overdue. Eileen and Irene Glenn, ~ ~ Have a Happy Thanksgiving and a happy year love, UD (remember mo?) Ronrta and Amy W.B.S.F Still think we Headquarters Sue Goodman of Synchronized Swimming: You have a big mouth and that's all that's blgl Sharon Iris, Just want lo loll you how greal o Iriend you An unknown synchronized cygnet Lovu, Lisa Srulowitz NOVEMBER 23, 1976 Wilh all my love, Wendy P.S. Eat me. Please. To' Everyone who worked so hard on the gong show, thanks so much! Debbie Jackie JAP: Careful not to mix over tho vacation. We'll find out— Gauche Gallos Dear Kirby, I dig your bod and everything else that goes with it. Love, Perlman Linda, Music Librians for Saturday I 1-3 don't come easy. Don't leave You're hard to replace. Flip Marc BeneckeDon't cry. Al! presidents luck up now and then. Richard Nixon Dear Squel, Your choes are loo big and I wont my Townehouse, Norton Dearest Michael, Thonks tor being the reason lor the most beautiful Birthday I've ever known. All my love to you, Orna ,ULB raoD ,uoy ol yadhtnB yppaH ,uoy ol yadblriB yppaH ,ULB raed yadhtriB yppaH luoy ol yadhlriB yppaH yecatS ,ovoL To Sylvia, People are like sun ray, always clear until put in the right pyramid. Then true colors will show, and your colors showed. You're beautiful thanks for being my Iriend. ?5th Anniversary ol Holiday Sing is sponsored by Pan Hellenic Council and will bo hold in the C.C. Ballroom Doe 12. Holiday Sing is coming to the C.C. Ballroom on Dec 12 Be there! Robin and Debbie, It's really so great working with the two ol you on Fndays. I love you both! Bob Alexis I basically am definitely enjoying whatever love, Nancy P.S. What's cooking? Honeydow I'm sorry too! V(b) If enemies is what you wanl . . . Annie, Hove a Happy Thanksgiving but moreover thanks lor giving me tho one thing that I am most thankful lor, you. Andy Linda, the guys ol 1103 Livingston, and the girls of Adirondack 204, I'm sorry about any past obnoxious and infringement of rights. Sometimes people get so wrapped up in their own feelings they forget about others. Luckily, things tend to FUft around. Dr. Cannon: Wish you were last-in, first-out in our lives. Carlene, Arlene, Darlene * " • Chinese guy with tho beige Jacket andgreonknapiack.MaUyoyrteHkrwwnl ___" M e d , ° (tav0': Happy nine months! (Though you didn't like m e un,il Junt '> lovo you, Mkkey Dear RAL, Things will be great together, even with all the bullshit. LYl'sJ.B. Sweets, Have a happy Turkey Day. This time I won't worry! love, Your bunchy hons. Danny— You'd better not come back with I " 0 ' " , h i n a " a f t 8 f Thanksgiving—or elsol — AnneHe Dear Blur, I love you only for your body. Luv, Your Soc. 115 'Woman' 306 Steinmeti— H o y coy w o y coy tjem v o u \00y \ik(! you Cfy? T h a n k l (or your imi|ej y o u eyeii o n d ^|| my \0V9i you! Susan Roscoe 7-7768 ^nn |oving( j Fun de)ai|s o n boyfriend available. For ^ qualifications, coll 7-8717. uied |<m debonair, virile, handsome, and horny. I Q r e a , p o | j , i c a | ambition. Call Ken at 459.5945. —• •— •• — — Why is it that 5 ° ™ people don't Understand the Asp personals? have o40 A M — •• • • --• Dale ol Colonial Quad, Stop teasing us!!! — To Dear Pat, Congratulations on leaving your teen years behind Welcome to tho older generation. Have a groat Birthday! Love, Peter Wanted: Martha Levenstein to stop saying, "Can I just tell you something?" and, "I swear!" To Nancy ol 702 (?), Todah again lor the help in Evreet! Whitman's Lost Soul Jean ol 300, Tho FOOTBALL team and Potter's Club soy thanx for the exotic acrobatics. Hey Abdul, I don 1 cure i( you don'l do dishes, I lovo you anyway! Attention: Zenger Hall challenges any Hall on campus to anything. (We'll Kick Your Ass). d You and tho "Boys "bo good thiswoekl Also, LH: Happy Thanksgiving! Good luck with storm windows, leaks, and Mom! 1 a nice Thanksgiving P S Don'l wish me a nice Thanksgiving, I am olready "Thankful" lor what you he "given" • HA Members of the RAT Club, Thank you lor your ost discreet advertisement When 0 winner is picked we r shall lovo navealways, a special meetingPar lo Excellence celebrate! Secretary Here s the Kpersona that yau wanted me lo ' pul m for yau All Accounting Ma|ors: How much do I make al Bpercent mtorosl on 3,000 lor fifteen months? Marc Benocko Dear Al, Amy, Barb, Bab, Brian, Chuck, Frod, Gary, Joff, John, Laura, Liz, Mark, ', ' _ ' .. _ Meg, Meryl, Michelle, Miko, Paul, Phil, Ray D . Ray J , Rob, Sell,, Stevo, Tony. Thanks tor coring while I was sick./I'm not too shy lo soy/ That I really lovo you/ Dave Happy T,G„ George Dear Mindy, Two personals in one week, Not badl Get psyched for Jai-Alai Nut Bakes, How can I moke it through my life, if I don'l have you. Shakes ALBANY STUDENT PRESS To ^arv' Happy Thanksgiving to oil good geography Telephones and "backrubs" are (or special m a j o r l / e , p e c i a | | y Judy, Pete, Kathie, Dan, people. But, sweetheart, no more! P e t e w „ Chuck, Ralph. Love, Judy . - „ —__ j 0 ^nflj lo Dreidel and my twin, , a m m o biggest, burliest, most rugged guy Thanx lor the card and the personal, One downtown. Call 472-6775. question though, .dothecandleshavelobe ^ THE OOPER Kosher lor Passover? -— Ragdoll Dear Ann, t, too, am interested in a meaningful Dear Judi and Jill, relationship. I'm well liked, friendly, good How nice it is to love you both. sense of humor, intelligent, sincere, good Your boyfriend, C looking, and hung like a brahma bull. Patrick, Happy Birthday (or day after to bo exact)! liven the production manager rales his own puisonal... Love, Lis Martha, II you saw a turkey walk this way would you "-S-Got ft? How oHon? ' Brii HOLIDAY SING IS COMING Dear Debi, I can spell your name right, but I can't surprise you wilh a personal. ool it? don't know? BobYour talent is surpassed only by you/ beautiful personality. You were a great success Thursday n i g h t - as you well deserve to be. Eileen— There are no words to express what is in my heart. Hove a beautiful birthday and always remember that I love you. Wendy Melnnie K ol Waterbury You ate definitely the bost looking freshman on campus. Alden Admirer Oul some things urti improbable. Mr. A2A Dear Peepac, Remember "Good friends are forever" (and always). Love, Bo-ne P.S. Than* lor everything Debbie Smiley: I look forward to the ride back— Ihopeyou will hold my hand. Love, Alan ' " e ^ onothor joke before Peter < Of course...much love, Ellen Dear Roberta, You're absolutely the greatest person I've ever known! All my love always, Eddie Nolhmg is impossible To my Dizzy Romantic, Unlikely as it may be nothing is impossible. Thanx for sharing your sentiments with me, Your uncurablo Realist Dr. Jet, Congratulations from the bottom of my heart. I'm really proud of you! Bobby— Lets kick Marty out and... (Thanks Martyl). Hurry Door Admirer, I think I know yau well enough So, I'll see you tonight al my place. Love, N.8 all your problems bo small ones, love, Richard To all the frrt frrt amatuers. You're getting better, (mails in). The Frrt Frrt King Us Zoo Crow Eoehl Time will pull us apart, but stay clo'>e always This year tho greatest DOl To that cute little English major LINDA, May Miss BBG: I still owe you five, how about a rain check. Germoine, Your a great volleyball player. Let's remain close friends. One Concerned Person, Guess Who? "•' < • * * • • AWXWOT Jane, Quick! Bob and R a y Should we be insulted that you fall asleep in our beds? Love, Sue Dear Petra Happy Birthday Rodlord ^ j m t t * * * ' * * * ' **•" JAH.^ i__ ...— »AOtsynAe* -*-•-- *—*— .w Lovo. Voiorto Judy Lovo, Betsy Judy, 'Fni, Flit' To Suite 1303, Wanted: fall, dirty blond guy who works in Stato Caletoria. P.S.W/B il not taken. .;",_, lovo, Eloyne turkey! Lise What ever happonod lo us becoming known as "Crazy 1303". Lovu, T M. M. K. ; Lovo, O'D. Dear Charly, Oh, Pooh! I miss you already home. HHS» Soon any cute Ecllpos lately? See If they wont to ploy tennis. Turkey; Hero ll the personal that you begged me to put in. Love, Deb (RA) Aud, All your "applicating" will be worthwhile. I know you'll get what you want. Susan . Door Janet, \. ,. PERSONALS ! Karen, Parakeets do not, repeat, do not lose their feet. Regardless of what mothers say! ^~^..r —Suite 302 "_" „ For 27 months of Southern Comfort, the cuddliest tribble and your perfect being. Thanks Ovs, ., ' . , ,1, . «. 1 .1 No, tl No, tho past l'/i years haven t been the greotest. Much Love, Freddie the Penguin Kane Jelly— ,,,..IT1!r, T . . , . , , , WANTED: Two whales for sex study. Inquire at Sig, 9 Tues, nights. —Kllroy REN . V ,' . ,,, -J.S. P.S.— Can't wait till Chem I32x Missing: One scrotum from DeLancey Hall. , , ,. , T P.S. lorn, remember tho cannolis, p ease, DC Sneaky, resourceful (and wonderful)— Happy, happy birthday (you're only 7 twicel). Libby, No matter how rough things get, you can always depend on mo, Rhonda Jeff, Don't worry, we'll knock those herds dead In Functional. Rhonda P.S. Where's my ASP? PAGE FIFTEEN mma I t M ptMOSS) ( W # f soy t n # W0FOS; ^ r m twin,,: ,-, • g a i W r S u a f L l Heeler or. W o * * > M a n I H M M t sis* Keeper are coming December 10th. ASC i _ _ 1 : AKb*wyou*»bo»ll«S«W!'Ale»emd Mb) Dog" on Doe. 3rd. r Spend Saturday afternoon a t tho movies with the best in Sci-Fl December In LC-11. Tnonks foe orwoys M i n g H i m . love, Twin P . l When does tho beord M l come? Attention norce HoH Zoo Rotldents from roll 73 to Spring 74. (bunion December 3, 9 p.m. of W T i . Door Meg: Vow a r t Hit woman that I'vo always droomod o l , I know it from tho itart. love, Mfehatl Otor M i a LaRue, Dori't hurt your honey anymore, ho lovo> youl Lovo and Kisses, Schwotthart 7 1 Striped sweaters and Orange Juice. Will wo romombor on my 18th? Love, Ex-lonely Phag Yo Rat and Co.!, You guys aro Turdi. Thanks lor molting Hfo interesting— OG Barb] Just bocauio you're an "other", it doesn't moon you can't get a personal. Jane M i . E, Poopy on yoopyl {which meant* "I love being with you"). Lovo, UHe R. Baby R u t h Sleep li neat but: Spice if nice. Love alwayi, The Child To My Darting P.B., Happy Anniversary once againl The magic number Is FIVE. Lovo, M.B. •arborelli, Tho thing saving me after leaving you each time Is thinking of seeing you again. Shops Blgaaaak, I'll always be there, even if S.O. Is in the room. Thanks for tolerating me. OutCAST ANN, Not the type of thing to print in an ad. Please call me. Steve 465-7446. Crozey Janey, Let's make love In the dirt, while tinging our birthday song. Mission Man Babaloule, so where'* the peanut butter? Queek Draw P.S. Tall me about the lasagne. Roseolita, I've got the fever (or you. It ain't the meat it's the motion. Southside See a l l the classics of Science Fiction (Including H 6 Will,) oil day Sat. Dec. 4th ASC' ~ T~~~ . u, _ 7"~ T~t See "A Boy and Hli D o g ' Doc. 3rd; an unusual tale ot survival, from ASC. First time on campus— Booties live ot Shea Stadium—December Uth—(plus2more0. ASC -; Dobs: If I had one, you'd bo teasing it. No longer "Psyched" Dear Alice, Hero is your personal) Read it in good health, dear friend. Love, Karen (T.T.) To whoever loft Josio and Honkie on our doorstep. Y,our lovely kittens have besjn exterminated. 211 Ontario St. Donna, This small poem. Is the last. See tho future, Remember the past. ? Dear Jessica, Happy Transferring! Wishing you a 4,0 and 4 BF's. I'll miss you! Karen Love Mark Linda, Happy Belated Birthday! Remember the cons outnumber tho pros. Love, Your obnoxious roommate Feel like running away from school? To: M i a m i , C a r i b b e a n , Waikiki, Paris, Acapulco. Call Jo at,374-3171. Oh-Ohl, Happy Unbirthdayl 23 always, C.B. The Recorder Dear Dave, Just to say Happy Thanksgiving! I love Youl — Your very own Cookie Monster D.B., You mean the world to me; hoping for a happy future together, Love, B.D. Betsy, I'll miss youl Thanks for your help and your love. Don't curse, Love, Nancy — You will Flunk Community Service if you don't attend evaluation session before December 3. Info: 7-4801. To G.O.B., I'm really happy and can't wait till the 30th. Definitely not a J.A.P. CochisB— —Always so silent— but I see smile...someday...we're not statues. the Happy fourth anniversary! M a / we have many more. Love, Mart Ahonen, They'll probably give the Heisman Trophy to me but you're the best. Tony Dorset! Zenger, Have a nice Thanksgiving Christmas Party— General Dippikitl coming upl Hoses a r c r e d , Violets a r o blue „ , „ „ . „ „ „ „ „ u.,^1, " " " " ° K r , w | ' bulKh: Chocolate Sprinkles Ribbi) Ribbi, chocolate Sprinkle. ¥ Vou Debbie weokend. Fun and To my favorite JAPrince on Hudson, Your Aramis and bed sheets are on order. Your Mother! Chocolate Sprinkles We're Sane (?) Chocolate Sprinkles. Suite 403,. * lovo you. (I had to take advantage of the personal's sale). A.J Dear Hummingbird, Have a happy Turkey Day! I miss you already. Your loving Ornithologist Happy Turkey Day! To the. "Men" of 240 and the "Women" of 340. Dear Dink, This is your Thanksgiving card, lam certainly Love D. Dear Pat, Roses are red, violets are blue, Let's go skiing, boo-boo-bee-dool Ellen— I'm trying to be nice, Really!! Love, Rink Eileen, I'll always be on the scene. Love, Jim Ed and Mike, Thank you for the white rose. Love, THE IVORY SOAP GIRL Feel like running away form school? To: San Francisco, Alaska, Miami, Rome. Call Jo at 374-3171. Dear Anna, Happy 19th birthday. Here's to friend-ship far another?? yrs. Love Ya, Missy — Dear Grace; I taught my friends how to make a horny bullLove, Perry Hey babe, Happy Anniversary! Thanks for everything and understanding mo this past year. Yaur honey BCR no coded messages "cause you know how I hate secrets. Onward to December first! C.N., Aro you ready (or the next throe. Goad luck, regardless. E.T. Michelle— How about a vulgar game ot scrabble? I'll break your toes yell Elaine To an ex-dog (Fido), Is it true you have WHIP-Lash? Andy Panda, Bel you never expectud lo seo this. I lovo and miss you. My little Kathy Nancy: Happy 18th Birthday to a great suitematel Mucho love, April, Colee.DONA AND MICHELLE Donna, Ginny, Look up! It might start to rain. (In the caletoria?) Love, Mark Alligator, Fun, the toRrific, Irreplaceable, grEot, N e e d e D , spells out how much you mean to me. Crocodile Rich, Stan, ond Perl, are wenches. I, howover, havon't the heart to tell them. Larry M a r y Breath, How's Big Tom? W i n any records lately? C o for ttl Yeah! WWW <»» ' •'• Glno, You can't be pregnant.Theydon't grow that big In Texatll WWW If you don't quit sleeping, that bo. will never get used up. WWW PAGE SIXTEEN Happy Thanksgiving, L e m o n , P u g g y (Tomato), Chipmunk, S a r o h a r a , Popcorn, Rickala, a n d everyone J. Boy Dear Zil, Sorry I overslept but I h a d a very hard nightl THANKSIII! Dan Juan Eric Goldstein; W h y would D e a n of Students, Neil Brown, coll mo a t 12:30 A M ? Resigned Love, Susan .BabeI love you. I'll always beYour Baby P.S. Happy Thanksgiving. I'll miss youl Dear Karen, Have a happy Thanksgiving! You'll get yours Sunday night. Love, Mouw-sie Hal— 'Shrooms are the worst food in the world! Rie thankful for you. Nancy: Enjoy your Iflth! W e ' d help, BUT,.. We're going to b e d now, Goodnight! Love, A-C-D-M Dear Boss, Soon all (he turkeys will be gobbled up. You're next! love, Boss Lisa, Hero's your personal. Satisfied? Happy f ^ u ^ g i Dear Taimanian, Really glad we got to be closer friends. Love, Wombat To the Martian Twins; Pete and Chris: MARS! From your friends on Earth. Mike, Happy 19th honey) You're mine a n d I love you, Anne Door Judy, Th.t it for you, your very o w n . . . Have a good Turkey! Hone Seaman: If you're camming this vacation douche dally with coke {pun fully Intended.) Saliva H.W., Have a good Thanksgiving weekend. You deserve it. C.Q.S.S. 203 Eastman Fetskys even though we have our minor argument! w e still lave you 502. faWlt, W t l o . . / o u r lW 9 toi how about o b r M l t o r two????? AlrloM, a thigh"! luHkelllll. ... ~ Daar Mnrrdo, . h e , , w # have many years together. I lovo yourbed. . Lovo,' Larry Ivan: let's Got Highlit Wanna smoke "onion dip"? Let's have a "T" party!!! Pleased! Dear Nooky, Look for me!!! (You don't realty love me, do you?) Love, Nookie T To a truly unique person who makes funny faces: Qu'est-que c'est baby? Wont to male money? Steal (torn your clou '•oeWt.m.nlll J5 «j. ;£ ? ' . , , '-;.'; WHrHr>» y o u lotia love o n d happiness on your » 2 | « „ birthdoyl l o v o a l w a y i , Nancy W h a t / W h o is na anal Worger? Clifford G l o n t i is. Squeal, Fat Boy! Stelmey Jo Hamilton Curlies, Mustache, Elevator M a n , Sergeant Foley, California, Bird, Cot, P i a n o M a n , and Blue Meanie? Carrie and G a y l o , Thanks for making SUNYA special. You two are the Greatest!! Love, Stephanie Dear Bitch, I love you hini. O h Gracious! I hope we're together forever. M a m a Leone LuAnne, Happy Thanksgiving! I wish we could have spent it together, I Love Youl Dim ps Yum Yum Yum, Thanks for tho best 18 months of my life, I Love You, Kinky, q u o f e b a a r d , lost things, "no one's home", D O Q , balconlzlng, cafeterioratlng, "of 'he world", Sutter's field. Feel like running away from school? To: Montreal, Montmarte, Greek Islands, Arizona. Call Jo at 374-3171. Cathy, Happy Birthday; so Drink and get Drunk playing Funk with your Hunk. Mary and lynne Feel like running away from school? To: Madrid, London, Israel, Colorado, Vail. Call Jo at 374-3171. Congratulations Peg, To our sweet mate for becoming a member of Phi Beta Kappa. We knew you could do it. > o f t •pboncl Wrong directionsDave, Thanks for tho good tftntill Stephanie arid Gayle-Goyle M%fr30V If you daro wear short-shorts, nair for shortshort. Your Co-WIno Pat, Hero's an early "Happy Birthday" to a roommate who alwayi wanted a personal. Liz Dear August 9: Hungry? My mother just sent up these cookies... love, December 18 Sugar Magnolia, I'll write you love songs written in the letters of your name. ACE Steven, Happy 211 This is late, but that's my style. I Love You. . Cyndy CathyThanks for sharing, caring, staying up all night talking— and for being my roomie! Interested in League 2 Co-ed Volleyball? Sign roster of sports Tushl&s in CC 356 now! Mark Feigen D . D . S , Congratulations on your fantastic board scores! Whatever you decide, you're backed 100 percent!!! In Freshman months our work was diligent but brief were the days we remained so innocent. To worldly ways beyond our sheltered houses of studying, smoking and searching for spouses. —b Lisa, You've just got to keep believing in "Miracles", and you'll get by. Love, Karen Janet— Thank you for being you, for dinners, for personals, and all that— Amy BonnieSue: Glad we had our talk last week. Now when are we swapping roommates? —Joel Love, Steph and LoVonne Kathy, Andrea, Sue, Where's my spring cleaning? Just remember, I strike back (defensively)! Love, Barbara Steve, Do any black cow imitations lately? " M o o " . Squirrel and Sunshine Pat, You make life beautiful a n d Thanksgiving mean so much. I love you. Yours, Debbie Brighton— I'm belting on tho horse to bring you good luck this year. Tom, Fairporl "Its too much trouble", Thanks for the parties! Phil Phooh— S q u i r r e l , Sunshine, 5uzie-Q, a n d How's your flowering prick...OH— We Razorsharp mean your plant. (P.S. What's up?) Jim, Gillrock, Thanks for the tuna fish sandwich, but next time put it on white bruadl Dear Steve, Stevo, M a r k , Marty and especially Bob, You're all amoral and perverted! J. Gregory Rosy, HAS, Lelty, Norman, Bomb, I'm not over-thehlll yetl Thanx, Old M a n Dear Guido, Come back— you loft your overalls. Pounds— 8 2 weeks, A shared birthdays, thousands of miles... My Love continues to infinity, MSB Dear Susan, Have the happiest birthday ever You deservo it. I can't wait till Doc. 41 Love, Robert Alicia, Here's your personal, .and G o d bless O'Heany's Bar and Grill. Doovy lawren. . And Thanksgiving. love, Wombat ™ "* " Door Karen, ' ""» " h " ^ & , w o n t * A, wish yoo a happy aa,. . " W Jtanknlvlngl You'll get nlaM To Money r M H # l fc^jj fm ww, Can we got together over thanksgiving? O.S.P ' o u " *""'""' Who Is lennylenokowtky? Ask Mike, Pete Molei—Applications being accepted for Gary or anyone from Anthony Hall. «'ght and heavy dusting. Apron and fan Here's provrded. 441 Hudson "abortions" ond the "Will Wong Fan Club" ' anyone come out and play with me??? love, Mouwsse Student Association is in Room CC 346 Come up and see us sometime. M a to bedtime Dear Janet, Dear Paul, Here is your second personal, oh yeah, gee you're swellll Dear George, «' G "« ROB 3 ^ ^ «** ? * T ' For a most attractive manYour glistening blue eyes taught me so much—Thanks. Steve Lynn, Why did you go homo early? YOUR Housemates __^^^_^^^^_^_ Marcia, Thanks for the personal. Gary To Nancy and the rest of Alden 1st floor, « ^ * « Sue R.A. Ann, * a m lonely, sex-starved a n d looking for a cerebral relationship. Call 7-4995, Bob Cohen, I really had nothing to say, but this was such a deal! Leen Michelle, Smile! There Is something to look forward Dear detectors: a year ago: bagel shop, Where are you now? I miss you! Linda Deor EEEIayne, Do nibbles wear feety pajamas? Mr.Tennis Dear Alan, ' never knew I liked rootbeer so much. & W is great) Wendy ' P.S.- FagglrtlH! love, Judo O'D: Maybe the "HANDS OF FATE" will work Lov(tj B l j d made it—A #1 teach. It's over, The seasons passed (and so did we). We're seniors now with a sleepless degree. With friendships to treasure; oy, it's a pleasure. ALU, Dear Ellen, Happy Tuesday! I love you very, very, very much! Love, Mark A.M., Soon that is the way everybody will know you I can't wait! Love P.M. Love, Janet Lev, Angelpie, Mike, Scumbag, Mac, Suze, Watts, Dots, M.B., no. 2: AAAAYY1 The Font loves yas! 51 u, When are you going to redeem your raincheck from psych? LAURIE O.D.—Enjoy, Happy vacation: FETSKY Jud A STONES fan F.T.U., Thanks for making my birthday and my life more meaningful. Your ex-pres., Gerri Sylvester, I tawt I taw a puddy tat. I did tee a puddy tat! Birdie Happ'y Birtnday to a story.»e||er, great My Dearest Love, M a y your birthday be happy, even though lemon Buns— Hope Thanksgiving is g r e a t — you big "turkey"! See you after vacation!!! Love, Pigtails Love, Kim-Denise Dear Shari, We're glad that you remembered your glasses to Cuckoo's N e i t . Barbaras of 206 IC*7. like where it the mean green? Do Do Drawers Woody Allen is back to SUNYA with Sleeper B etsy, a n d Bananas December 10th...Don't mist Nut. O n your 2 tit, w e with you lots of love a n d happiness. H a p p y Birthday! Love, M a r g a r e t a n d Peg there. You're o beautiful person. I hold special Turkey: I still like you, even if I don't go home with you ^Gammo nai OeaTEHonl " Al you see, you're worth a quarter. Better luck next time. P.D. now Honey, Thanki for being yourself. You've helped me In countless ways a n d I'm happylll Love, Baby Doll — To my Favorite W.A.R.P.: You're right— why take a Prince over the King (Maharajah?). Dear Don (Tree), W r e . h l r o d for Chrlitmail Don't forget to WM'r your secret ogent outfit. NOVEMBER 23, 1976 integral part of our memory. Deen an - Thanks. "' Cd,eae meaM moro • M a y your 19th time around be filled with amorelto sours a n d cinnamon poptarts. cont'd. "Let's Play!" Gar YW e love you. M a k e a friend, give a n accounting major a job, History Honor Society INTEREST MEETING f o r prospective members— Tuesday December 7 at 7:30, Fireside lounge Dear Spanky, You let us up! Don't worry about it. Love, Superman gazers of Cooper KBVSB, Why are you acting like such a Fuckhead, sweetie? You know who Peter Sulttier you aro never in Accounting Class. What i i a Xerox 7000 or 3100 IOC? Ask l o b CC 111 {Next to chock cashing). ONE DAY AT A TIME. Lisa, Moke sure you got your gloss of wine from Don. Miko Ferris, We never M O you anymore. Miko Ferris, Do you mite Morrkfct Miko Berman, Do you miss Booob? D.G., B.C., V.K., E.D., I.R., J.R.B., ond everyone also here who makes the ASP a really nice place to be: Have a Happy Thanksgiving— I'm very Thankful for having you for friends. Love, Lisa Join Albany State Cinema Speakers Forum a n d / c r Concert Board. Winter, Spring, Summer or Fall, you've got a friend. Ellen Fine— Do your payroll on time. Gary Cindy— Your Great. John Denver for Bob Hansen Listen to WSUA and the Bob Siegel s h o w tune you- dial to 6 4 0 A M . Teresa, The people, people, miss you, miss you, the P ^ p l e , all purpleHappy Thanksgiving! Sybil Awaiting Aw oi,ina y ur r Gary To Dan's Friend in Atlanta— HEILOHII The Classified Girls Students: Warning! Statistics prove that good grades are useful fornothing but grad school and getting interviews —and sometimes not even that. Advancement and most jobs :ome from experience with people, working and dealing with them. You can do that by working for the ASP or Student Association and it's groups. Canon, Pecelli, Bishko, Harris, Fonseca, Zitomer, Munsey, Nirenberg: Forgive theml They deserve A's at least for these 4 pages! Dear Horny Irishman, So what's new? Cm glad I met you. Don't worry about December. Princess: If you kiss me, I will turn into a Prince. Please consider. Love, The TOAD Jimmy Trimmer, Let's get it on! To make mistakes is human!!!!! Forgive and forget. Happy Birthday u r n , 0 moltl1 U , . ° «' we've missed. I love you. P ,or George Attention Males: I have one sex-starved roomie. PLEASE, help herll She answers to Dinl(|8£jorr;_ _ \ fjabycakesRemember: It may be confused, but I really do love you. Jessica's better half Norb Zanm Eat on campus more often. Eileen a n d Irene: Thanki for bearing with me. Dear Dino, Chem labs were made to be done at 5 a.m.... The Midnight Rambler T.L.P. At times we disagree, but I could never stop caring. Dei Good Luck Accounting Majors. Doc Cannon Gary Parke ^communication is important. —D.G. Jay, Here's one. -D.G. W h o is SA's President? wnal Maury, W a k e u p l l Roommates are supposed to talk at bedtime (not just wheeze)! Love, "Toria" Daar Got your monies worth. Join any S. A. group. an admirer PIZZZZZA? Andy, Your the best bartender In the worldl! Is it you or do you just spike a lot? YOUR FANS ~ D a n Gaines, Your A-OK. Gary Parker Food is o substitute! Barb Mellen, d Killer woMh Frank Davis— We know who you are) Jack's Friday night? AFO, It's Thanksgiving! Give thanks for good food and for Spike coming every time!!! WWW YOUR Scritcher Ivan: I ran up to Albany to put this one in. Brian, Thank you baby for tho BEST three years of my life. M o r e love, Jackie an Brogek—Stud, This will be the longest week apart, I miss you already. Love, Pussy Love, The Freak Show Gerri Love a ^ hugs, Rhonda Alas, Alack! W e can never go back. But these past 4 years will always be feelings for you. What a moosel Ray— "Nitei really a r e forever without y o u " — here's wishing w e could "get closer".., Lave, Deb Luv NOVEMBER 23,1B76 not God grant mo tho serenity to occept tho things t cannot change, Courage to change tho things I can, and tho wisdom to know tho difforonce. To Don's friend in Atlanta— HELLO Schnitz, |' m • Dwight, I'm not really the devil in sheep's (or rabbit's) clothing. Hugs ond Kisses, Noncy Ahil Eat Shit! Double Bummer!; Como?!!; C'mon Jaime! yar mother... Love, the Cards of 403 FUCK ASS - Kevin, Flowers, m i d n i g h t donuts, wrestling matches— You're crazy but I love it! Love, Spiker I love you all for the fucks you are and the bitches you aren't. DYNAMO, HUMMMMM . Door Sir. (or to whom ft may concern). My goodness, but aren't you. a e t r a s M porion• However, t do DOHOVO fhed tooMg mo mora than once a week wW hofp your condition. W of nSe Devious Duo Barry Cohen, You never coll anymore. Hangman, You can hang out with me anytime. Hope you're not picking. Love, Brodine special-even WW, Dispatcher, Unit 43: Be advised Sheri is signal 7. Midnight shifts will be fun again! She!, Forget your cum. Just remember that YOU were on the Hudson with Charles. ,gy something ASP It a t w o y t fMssInf far W-t, ,.. . - . * i ^ J . ^ 1 * . ^ . ^^-..JeesW . ^ ^ . ^ ^ A ^ esmo: • eoporsstfscoej OOJ •ssssjeeton wen eeev w w pnj '-•—- » \- A^^-I,,-— a^^^ak eW AMI trwe^reseesSw fn nvtowMV •***e>^g^ppB»s»f »?••» -^B*T * Ofld (IIMMOTnMe CoYlfOCt OfJft Of U M Off 7* Love, Marilyn listener, sharer, and friend. Artie, Have a wonderful Thanksgiving! Banana, You're really Betsy— You truely are the most obsene, disgusting, perverted roommate ever— Thanks a "million". Deb Dear Li Li (Elite), Oh, Miss! Oh, Miss! I'm part eskimo. Love, Su-ey Brazen hussyYou didn't think I'd do it, did you? The Puritan Dear D e b , Have a very happy birthday. How about Blu— for a special friend on her birthday, I can only wish much love. Rinky Happy birthday, honey Dear Dena, Did something brighten up your day? I hope Dear Stranger, You are a CUTIEIII Love, M o , Jezi, Percy, and a handful of pals Our future together will bring only happiness. We will always bel Love PBM I Dave, You always know how to make me happy. Kelly Ave Wusl New Rock B a n d — For info call Bob at 477-8654. To tho Terrilic Ten, Congratulations! Wo're so Happy you'ro our sisters and Iriendsl Lovo XEO Ariane, Thank you for the Happiest 7 months of my Life. I Love You. Peter Nance, Congrats! Poppin' Fresh, Try to understand the trouble I have in understanding you. love, P.M. Floyd— Now really who is a bigger J.A.P. Honey Bunchies, I love you more than you could know. You're wonderful I lovo, Hairy Chest Pan Hellenic Council is TXO, ETB, KD, XEO, APA a n d Psi G a m You backrubi? lovo, Judy Rom- Vivian, I didn't come home just to oat turkey. Have something else ready? Love, Ttveo Dear Spanky, H a v e a Happy Thanksgiving. W e Lovo You Too!l! The Wosted Case Mark, RCO 262— the rhetoric of Sounds good to me! Robin in French 355AWill you please shut up for once? -The Class I want to mongoose you tonight! Love, Eric the Bully Bull Dear Pussy Cat, I want to make up for past mistakes. Look my way. I have a kiss waiting for you. Love, Roof Reneo Dollings: (a.k.o.—"Nod") Go stool mo a few potatoes, sveatheartl! lovo, Cisco Kid Amy, I guess we were just lucky. Thanks for always beirigthere. Love, Steve ^•$• $° '* v o u r brother! G o back to Oswego! Billy, Here's to turtlenecks, brute " P V ' , "E's". talks to 5:00 a . m . Thanks. Love y a , Gerson Person Mark, It's boon a groat seventeen months and I lovo you more each day. Rose Debbie (Jeep) The nest, tho nook tho castle, what will b e next? *L anamus, You're an assholel 392 Madison: It's been great so far, let's keep It up. 592-1 To tho bestest P.B.M'. ever, Happy Anniversary, cutie! I love you now and alwayi. Yours, A L U . Gad Zeuksl I think I'll keep you. • love, Martha Love, Sweet Meat Norma B., Hope you enjoy Paul as much at we do. 592 Joanne, Roberta, and Sally, This proves I realty do appreciate you. Love and Kisses, Jim £ " " " " " " " " ^ " ~~~ "~ J "' Dear Peter, Have a happy Turkey! I'm going to mitt you very much. lovo, Arione D.D. Lov ^ more Are now available to all eligible men, who j a r J | , t 0 try anything. Who hot the S.A. van? ^ no c.B. 4 M.S. are wi||jnQ an( ^ snacks, -Victoria had I known you better then i wourdVe sold those three old words . . . love, Gary " A very Happy Birthday i i wished to our suponwoet sutteel Lovo, Dor and Websy |,ina, •w tn|ayyou,vac^n. Wanda: t l l K t phip Drive carefully. Student Association f m rooty gonna mfn you neat Hmeefr. lovo you sand good fuck. " Sue Lovo, Geri though you'ro engaged. WOW! Your new roomie Mark and Barbara, Dedicated to the birthmarks of two of my favorite people. Love Barbie ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Hi. Dear Susan B. and Bicky, No matter what, you'll never make Royal High Moles. Love, FOX creep, for your love, i am thankful, toast to our future! love, your little pony The Beatles a t Shea Stadium, Help, A H a r d Day's N i g h t — only $.50, December 11th, __ .ir Really glad w . aot to be dose, Mend, Betty-Ann, You a r e now a God-f oaring womanl Happy ) 9th. L 0 V f l ( Annmarie a n d Sharon Diane, Congratulations on your engagement. Contrary to popular belief, "You Do Know". Much Love, Alnn Marc, Lany, Rob Where it the contact office? Dear Tasmanian, // Happy 19th, kid. Keep on bein'yourself a n d makm' me laugh. Love y o , Glenn Barbara, Being with you is better than All M y Children and Silly Soup ond Chili Crackors combined. Happy Thanksgiving. Love, Denis some Hot Chocolate? PfRSQIMALS Crinkt: Who's a Bimbo? Jay: You're a Turkey!!) Karen: You're such a cute Retard!!! Dear Artie, Fuck you, you'ro not noatll Love: Carol, B.J., Terry, Mrs. R., e t c . , To Johnnie: The best for four years that SUNYA soccer team over h o d . Love, XO Naive, Your sympathetic ears are appreciated, Sorry for making you tho "middleman". love yo, Sue Harry, Joe, ond the Gang: Thanks for tho 11th. Spike, Martin, and Moan Cousin Molvln ALBANY STUDENT PRESS Who Is the Student's leader? W o really enjoyed International Night this past Saturday! Hearl Hearl N.L., D.S., D.G., G.P., K.M., A.V, EHoen and Irene, Good ideas take work. Because of you, hundreds of students aro happier. Doesn't that feel good? —D.G. Eiletn, Vino is coming. -D.G. Correction to the Tower T r i b u n e Mike Berman is in Who's W h o in American Colleges a n d Universities. A Friend G u n t h t r Football is number one. PAGE SEVENTEEN iimmeie* Free Agents Still Available SPORTS BRIEFS iT»TCnniS.PUKXiTK»ColleqeVbccition Package! GOLF HONC KONG Judy Rankin of the United States carded a final-found one-over-par 73 and won the $50,000 Hong Kong Open invitational golf championship by three strokes over i Japan's Chalo Higuchi. CHANDLER, Arte; Brady Miller of Skokie, 111., defeated Ray Arrino of Sacramento, Calif., by two strokes in a three-hole playoff in winning the $77,000 NO A Open golf tournament. MEXICO CITY. Ernesto Perez Acosta of Mexico fired a threeunder-par 68 for a 72-hole total of 273 and won the $ 12,000firstprize in the Mexico Open golf tournament. PHOENIX, Ariz. Defending champion Willie Barber of Cosa Mesa, Calif., Jack Webb of Des Moines, Iowa, and Gaylon Simon of Benton Harbor, Mich., were tied for the lead after the first round of the U.S. National Senior Open Golf Tournament with five-under-par 67s. TENNIS WEMBLEY, England Jimmy Connors of Belleville, III., defeated Roscoe Tanner of Lookout Mountain, Tenn., 3-6, 7-6, 6-4 and captured, the $125,000 international Grand Prix tennis tournament. NISHINOMIYA, Japan Australian Tony Roche upset countryman and defending champion Ken I'osewall 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 in the first round of a $100,000 international tennis tournament. MANILA Australians Ross Case and Geoff Masters won the men's doubles championship at the Phillippine International tennis tournament with a 6-0. 6-1 victory over ..Italy's Corrado Barrazutti and India's Anand Amritraj. BUENOS AIRES American Laura duPont captured the women's singles crown in the Argentine Open tennis tournament, downing Argentinian Beatrix Araujo 6-3, 6-2. AUTO RACING ONTARIO, Calif. David Pearson of Spartanburg, S.C., drove his Mercury to a lap victory over Lennie Pond in the $185,000 Los Angeles Times 500 NASCAR Grand National stock car race. BOWLING GLENDALE HEIGHTS, III, Gary Dickinson of Fort Worth, Tex., defeated Ernie Schlegcl of New York 247-176 in the championship game and won the $100,000 World Open Bowling Tournament. $ I ^__ _ ^_>g>- Tennle-Plue le for beginners and champa alike. College guyt and gale who art looking for Tennis-Plus fun. And the fun eterte tht first moment you board your new luxurious motorcoach along with dozene of other college etudehts looking for the same kind of Tennis-Plus fun. They'll all be guys snd gels from nearby campuses It's Informal. Caeual. Fun-focussed from start to finish. You'll stay at lohn Nawcombe'a 85-acre Ttnnla Village. Play unlimited Mnnia day or night on 17 champlonehlp courts. Racalva three 2'/i hour stations of Beginntr, Inttrmtdittt or Advanead eoneantrattd Instruction taught by a tint staff of John Ntwcombt-tralnad profat tionalt using tht txelutlva "Ntwk Plus Two" Mtthod. Enjoy sparkling new tlr-eonditlonsd, color tvtnd ttltphont-tqulpptd rooms. Luxurious pool. Prlvata laka and boating, ShutUt bua service to Oientyworld (10 minutes away), Sttworld, Sta Circus tnd other nearby attractions. Plus tht arat't "In-spot" Singles nightclub on premises. agent Jerry Kapstein. Kapstein still is negotiating contracts for infielder Bobby Grich and pitchers Rollie Fingers and Doyle Alexander. Also still looking lor new homes are slugger Reggie Jackson, who spent the weekend in Montreal, talking with Expos club officials, infielders Richie Hevner and Tito Fuentes, and pitcher Steve Stone, among- others. The California Angels, who sign- pjjjr M. Tennis-Plus is the Way to Go!... first-class accommodations... high quality tennis instructions... all the playing time you want... plus every opportunity to enjoy a fantastic vacation. And at a price that's so much less than you'd expect to pay because it's a package designed exclusively for college students. Option: 1877 Vega with Alr-Cond. and unlimited mileage— $58 plue insurance. These tour* are operated by Allstate Bus Corporation. Licensed and bonded by M.C. #12133. Varsity Hoopers Ready continued from page twenty were good enough to play in tournaments last season. For example, Pittsburgh, which according to Sauers "has its whole team back this year", won the NCAA Division 111 East Regional title last year. In January, the Danes will travel to Florida to take on Rollins College and St. Leo College. The former gave even "a team like North Carolina State a good game," said Sauers. Persons with weak hearts should avoid the gymnasium on December 28-29. That's the dates of the Capital District Tournament, in which Albany may lace archrival Siena. If tradition holds, the game will be a nailbiter. Js career in l a w wlthout law school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in which you want to work. 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T Pet. 170 8 2 0 .800 292 202 .727 280 8 3 0 174 .500 182 5 5 0 271 .273 134 3 8 0 184 2 9 0 .182 233 Central Division .818 270 165 9 2 0 135 7 4 0 .636 272 7 4 0 .636 223 225 4 7 0 .364 192 225 Western Division .909 242 201 10 1 0 7 4 0 .636 256 138 231 S 6 0 .455 215 3 8 0 .273 212 325 0 1 1 0 .000 95 290 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Eastern Division 146 9 2 0 .818 237 » 3 0 .727 254 217 187 .636 7 4 0 203 3 8 0 131 226 .273 1 .10 0 .091 104 207 Central Division .864 140 240 9 1 1 171 .455 189 3 6 0 5 6 0 .455 20K 102 .364 175 243 4 7 0 Western Division 159 .6K2 239 7 3 1 .545 216 154 6 5 0 226 259 .364 4 7 0 209 .364 1.18 4 7 0 198 340 2 9 0 .IH2 game not including lost night's Baltimore New England Miami NY Jets Buffalo Cinncinati Pittsburgh Cleveland Houston Oakland Denver S. Diego Kansas City Tampa Bay Dallas S. Louis Washington Philadelphia NY Giants Minnesota Chicago Detroit Green Bay Los Angeles San Francisco New Orleans Atlanta Seattle ) Nets Lose; Remain in Cellar "COME BACK. J-UCsTUS//* •* sv" , I Contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19103 (215) 732-6600 Operated by Para-Legal, Inc. ibTHBRE A POCTOK"IN TH& HOMSg? fit John Hewcombe's TEfiniS VILLAGE. Orlando. Florida. Departs Dec.26.1976. Returns Jan 3.1977. But tarty response hss been enthusiastic. And tpsct It limittd. So wt tuggttt you writt or phont now to confirm your rtstrvationt. f 4 Pro Football Standings ii The Institute for Paralegal Training C %. PAGE EIGHTEEN __ quod, oca triple oca double oca To: Marlboro Tours, Inc. 601 Fifth Ave, New York, N.Y. 10017 (212) 880-0640 (outelda of New York State phone toll-free: 800 223-7220) Yael Tennis-Plus sounds Ilka the perfect Way to Gol Encloaed find my deposit of $40 per pereon. Deposits must be received by Dee. 1,1878. Quad. Occupancy • Bslanee due: $134.80 Balance due: $158.40 Triple Occupancy . Balance due: $167.80 Double Occupancy . Want to talk It over? W Call MIDDLE EARTH-457-5300 24 Hours a Day UNIVERSITY OF PARISSORBONNE SUNY NEW PALTZ PROGRAM 7th YEAR Undergraduates in philosophy and related majors earn 30-32 credits in regular Sorbonne (Paris IV ) courses. SUNYParis IV agreement insures students avoid cumbersome prc-inscription and attend Paris IV, not provincial universities. Director assists with housing, programs, studies. Orientation, language review. Sept. I5-June IS. Estimated living, airlare.tuition, fees: $3400 N.Y. residents; $3900 others. Prof. P. Charlson, Philosophy Dept., S.U.C. New Paltz, New York 12561. (914) M7-2696 __ (AP) A frantic week of signing; has depleted baseball's free agent marketplace of some of its biggest stars, but there still are some good names available. Nine free agents — outfielders Gary Matthews, Joe Rudi and Don Baylor, pitchers Wayne Garland and Don Gullet, catcher Gene Tenace and infielders Dave Cash, Bert Campaneris and Sal Bando — came to terms last week. All except Matthews and Bando were clients of ed Rudi and Baylor last week,* went reported hot on Grich's trail with their main competition commg from the New York Yankees, who signed Gullett last week. Kapstein said Sunday that final proposals for Grich were on the table and the infielder was "in the process of finalizing his decision." Meanwhile. Kapstein concentrated on talks lor Fingers, the 30year-old bullpen ace. When he signs, he will be the sixth Oakland player to switch teams. Jackson would have been a seventh except the A's traded him to Baltimore last spring in the deal that brought Baylor to Oakland for one season. Montreal made Jackson the opening selection in the historic Nov. 4 free agent draft and spent the weekend cajoling the slugging outfielder. Before Jackson finished talking with the Expos and reportedly took oil lor New York. Expos Chairman of the Board Charles Bronfman said. "The discussions went very, very well." Dick Williams. Montreal's manager, who was pilot of the A's when Jackson played in Oakland, said. "I feel quite confident we'll have Reggieherc in Montreal." Alter his talks with the Expos, Jackson was scheduled to meet with officials ol the San Diego Padres and the Yankees, who were reported anxious to get Jackson or Grich. All 10 players who have signed so far have moved to teams with poorer records than the clubs they played lor last season. LOS ANGELES (AP) The Los Angeles Lakers arc 7-7 and share third place with Golden State in the National Basketball Association's Pacific Division alter Kareem Abdul-Jabbar led them to a 96-91 victory over the New York Nets. Abdul-Jabbar. who hit 14 of 16 shots from the field, scored .13 points and contributed 15 rebounds in the Sunday night game. forward C'azzic Russell added 20 points lor Los Angeles. The loss dropped the Nets deeper into the Atlantic Division cellar, lour games behind the idle Philadelphia 76ers. Their over-all record is 6-10. New York trailed by 14 points with six minutes remaining in the game and cut that to seven points in the next two minutes, only to have .os Angeles score 10 quick points and put the game out of reach. H igh scorer lor the Nets was guard John Williamson, with 27 points. Reserve center Jim Fox had 18 points, while guard Nate Archibald had 16. Forward Tim Bassett had 13 rebounds for New York. r- 5th Avenue Card Shop I wish to room with . Please eeelgn room-mate(e) to me. Rueh my confirmation and details on this supsr Tennle-Plue college Vacation to: Northway Mall Name — offers Addreee . City rn,|tl|T I I 1 ZIP. . State SUNY-ALBANY 1 . Phone. Signature . -Prlcee Include traneportatlon, accommodations tsxss and most grstuitlee. Plue 10% tex and services. Does not Includs admls£ n 1 h . r , . . * PUnSJworid. Se.world, Baa Circus, etc. Includs. "Welcome cocktail Party" drink. Conn., Mate., Rhode Island departuras add $20 to price, per pereon. 10% off | on any poster!!! I j ALBANY STUDENT PRESS NOVEMBER 23, 1976 NOVEMBER 23, 1076 ALBANY STUDENT PRESS rAG* NINETEEN &OltS Oalvanttjr of New York atAlbaajr ID AY Tuesday, Novteaber Is, MW ormwYouATAUiurr vocutniMo.tt •a, sere Swimmers Take Fourth In Relay Tournament Second Best Finish Ever; Coast Guard Victorious •' " i • V 1 ••'••' • \ ; - .V;v .-••.: . Swimmer* In tht Gymnasium's pool take a diva. The Danaa finished fourth in the Albany Stale Swimming and Diving Relay* held on Saturday. Paul Marshman, Mitch Rubin and Ed Watkln* turned In itrong performance*. Varsity Hoopsters Have Depth by Ed Moter Last season, the Albany State varsity basketball team came perilously close to having its first losing record in its 21 years under head coach Dick Sauers. It will be a disappointment if a 1976-77 crew with far greater depth and experience does not better last year's 12-11 mark. "At times we may play with one guard," says Sauers. This is a reflection not of weakness but of strength, for the Danes are stacked up front. Senior Bob Audi, at 6'2" is the recently reelected team captain. Asa small forward, Audi has learned to grab a rebound by boxing out his opponent. He also picks up a lot of'garbage baskets' by positioning himself in the right place. A thoroughly solid ballplayer, Audi was third on the team last year in scoring, rebounding and field goal percentage. Another 6'2" forward with the "smarts" is Vic Cesarc, also a senior. Cesare drew some twenty offensive charging violations last year, and his leaping ability (a 6'5" high jump in high school) makes him the team's best rebounder. Percentage-wise, his shooting was the sharpest. At 6'3", Kevin Keane is another relatively small forward. He's a versatile performer who can also play center or guard, and led the Danes in assists. Intelligence and versatility can only go so far, however. In a recent scrimmage against Le Moyne College, Albany's "biggest problem was rebounding", admitted Sauers. This problem, of course, stems from the Danes' lack of big men. For the Danes, the taller teams are going to be tough. Assistant Coach Bob Lewis feels that "Staton Winston, will improve our rebounding." Lewis adds, however, that the 6'2" sophomore needs more practice on his board work, for he has a bad habit of reaching for the ball with only one hand. Winston can shoot as well as leap: he led the junior varsity last year in scoring. Sophomore Dave Landry, standing at 6'3", rounds out the Dane forwards. The key man for Albany has to be 6'7" center Barry Cavanaugh, who as a freshman last year, paced the varsity with a 13.5 scoring average. The team's tallest man, he provides the inside scoring threat. On offense, he attracts attention, enabling his teammates to get tree. On defense, he intimidates, as evidenced by his 29 blocked shots last season. Cavanaugh must "keep out of foul trouble," says Coach Sauers, and "needs work on his defense," according to Lewis. Carmelo Verdcjo, a 6'3" soph, is the second center. He's shown promise in practice, and Sauers feels "he could be a big surprise". Soph Terry Miles, 6'5", is the other middleman. Albany's 'point' guards, two fine ballhandlers who will direct the offense, are Winston Royal and Gary Trevett. Royal, another sophomore at S'9", is the smallest member of the squad. Called up from the jv at mid-season, he proceeded to hit on an amazing 34 of 35 foul shots, including a school record 28 straight. A real crowdpleaser, the flashy Royal is exceedingly quick. Sauers says he has the potential to develop into the team leader. Trevett, a 6'2" senior, was out with a broken wrist for a good part of last season. Albany's all-time assist leader, Trevett was wOrely missed. He's presently nursing a knee injury which may keep him out of the December 2 opening game against Marist. Trevett is needed to help direct the "motion attack" the Danes will sport this year. Look for screens and lots of movement, as opposed to the more set pattern of play used in the past. Another guard is 5' 10" soph Brian Barker who as a freshman last year, played in every varsity game. Senior Mike Suprunowicz is the "gun" of the backcourt; he's Albany's best shooter. The 5'II" guard averaged over sixteen points a game until — like so many Danes last season — he was sidelined with an injury. Albany will be well off in terms of experience. There are no freshmen on this year's team, while four seniors will return. One good thing to come out of last year's injuries was that several freshmen got varsity playing time. The Danes will need their experience, and should pray for few injuries, for their schedule is far from easy. Seven of Albany's opponents continued on page nineteen by Andy Firestone The Seventh Annual Great Dane Swimming and Diving Relays were held this past Saturday at University Pool, and Coach Ron White's aquamen finished fourth in the eight team, four-year college division. Albany's 66 points in the nineevent program gave them their second best finish in the history of the relay carnival. Coast Guard's 152 points paced the competition. Other schools, in order of finish, were RPI, Oneonta, Binghamton, New Paltz, St. Michaels, and Keene State. The Danes' best effort was the 300-yard butterfly, where cocaptains Paul Marshman and Mitch Rubin teamed with Ed Watkins for a 2:56.9 time and a second place finish. The team placed fourth in five other relays: the 200-yard freestyle, the 300-yard backstroke, the 400- three goals and added two assists to torious. The Rats, helped by Bob lead the Colonists past Roratuscas, Stern's two goals and Rich 5-0. Marty Bednar recorded the Heimerle's three assists, upended Gunther, 5-2. shutout, Nanooks Noosed In League II games, Ronnie McIn other NHL Division action, the Manus scored twice to lead the Stage shelled the Nateless Nanooks, Barbers over Puck You by a 4-0 S-l; "A" Team blanked Boys of the count; Uncle John's Band rode Pin, 2-0; and AMF played Mother Helmut Oglis' two scores to a 4-1 verdict over God Bless Canada; and Puckers II to a l-l deadlock. Four shutouts marked the five- Gary Schectcr tallied his second goal game WHL Division schedule, as the of the game in the second period to Spinners, Downtown Blades, Take it provide the margin as Irv's Islanders to the Limit, and STB were vic- nipped the Merlz's, 3-2, by Bryan Holiberi Michael Rickman, part owner of a Dove St. residence where three SUNYA students were injured in a Nov. 17 fire, was arrested last week for two housing code violations. Rickman was charged with violating u condemnation order and with not providing u sprinkler system or lire escupe us required by state luw lor buildings with more than three apartments. "The building hud been condemned in September I975," said City Attorney John Roe, "and a sign posted visibly saying it was unfit for occupancy us uninhabitable and unsafe." Roc said Rickman was told in August I976 that there was to be no occupation of 48A Dove St. as he prepared lor a September lease transfer. "1 never got the ordinances from Roe on the city property condemnation," said Rickman. "There was no sign, although I had known of it when I bought the buildings." "I don't know when the sign came down," said Roe. A c c o r d i n g t o Roe, City authorities did not know people were living in the building until the lire occurred. "The house had been condemned," said Roc, "and when the lire trucks showed up people started jumping out." Although he expects more charges to follow, Roe said the City government would probably not be held ut fault in any of them. Members of the Albany Coalition for Effective Code Enforcement said City authorities knew of the building's occupancy prior to the fire. "Rickman had applied to the Olivtri The burnt structure of 48A Dove St. was the scene of a press conference last week to call attention to housing code violations. From left are Rezsln Adams, Roger Markovlcs and Tony Cheh. Building Department for a fire escape some weeks prior," suid Gregg Bell of the Coalition. "The City just had contact with him, they knew what he was doing but they don't keep records." Roe said Rickman could be fined from $10 to $2000 or be imprisoned lor 30 or both if found guilty ol the charges that have been leveled against him. According to Roe's interpretation of the law, each day someone was living in the building constitutes an violation. "But we don't know how long the people were living in the Wellington Rooms Robbed During Recess university photo service The Dane*' team captain Bob Audi (SO) battle* for a rebound as Kevin Keane (42) look* on. The vanity basketball team will open the 1976-77 season with a home game against Marist on December 2. Pups To Rely On Frosh together." He feels he and his team by Brian Oral "have a lot of work to do. and Judy Nisenbaum "We have the potential to win," "My aim is to develop players for says junior varsity basketball Coach the varsity," said Austin. Last year Bill Austin. This year's squad con- he accomplished his aim, as the sists of thirteen players, all freshmen, squad sent five players to the varsity. who have never played together This was "exceptionally good since before this season. The team's no varsity player graduated hist success depends on their ability to year," he said. "work together us a unit." Austin, in his sophomore season Coach Austin does not see "any at State, felt he could not make major difference" between this year's predictions on the outcome of the squad and last year's team. "I do not season, ut this point in time. "After a compare in that way, " he said. few games," commented Austin, "I Austin, ruther, has his own can tell better." philosophy of choosing his team. Potential "When I pick a squad," he said, "I The one statement he made conchoose thirteen players who can do cerning the Pups'chances this season the job." This philosophy prohibits was, "We have some potentially him from choosing potential team good ballplayers on this team. It is a leaders or stars before the season question of utilizing our talent." begins. The junior varsity basketbull Thus far, the junior varsity has season opens December 2, at home played four scrimmages. Coach against Marist us a preliminary to Austin has used these "to get a team the varsity contest. AMIA Hockey Opens; Clams Beat Image by Andy Firestone AMIA Floor Hockey began its third season Sunday with a set-up featuring two divisions in League I and one division in League II. The opening game featured two of last year's playoff contenders, as the Bearded Clams defeated the Blues Image, 3-2. Mark Constantino set up Tom Martin's second goal of the game at 9:15 of the third period for the victory. Andy Firestone scored twice for the losers. Captain Bob Pape pumped home yard medley, the 800-yard freestyle, and a meter diving relay. In two others, Albany was disqualified. "However, if wouldn't have affected our final standing," said Coach White. The coach was impressed with his team's performance in light of the fact that two of his key swimmers did not compete. Bill Stockwell, a freshman, is taking time off after the junior varsity football season, and will begin competitive swimming after the Thanksgiving recess. The backstroke events suffered from the loss of freshman Mike McCann, who will also return to action after Thanksgiving. The Danes travel to New Paltz on Saturday, December 4th, and return home on December Nth to face Plattsburgh in a Saturday matinee beginning at 2 p.m. Landlord Is Arrested In Dove Street Fire Case by Ed Moser Two student residents at the Hotel Wellington claim that valuable items were stolen from their rooms over the Thanksgiving recess. Rick Cortreneo reported a stereo receiver and two speakers missing. A second student who wished to remain unidentified said he returned Sunday and found his amplifier, color television set and turntable cartridge missing. The two estimated the combined worth of the missing items at about $1,400. The matter is currently under investigation by Albany police, who have interviewed the two students involved and have searched their rooms lor fingerprints. "It looks like an inside job to me," said the anonymous student, who stated he had his door double-locked before leaving for the holidays. He said that because the door was still double-locked upon his return, the thief must have had access to the hotel master key. The student threatened to "sue the city for negligence" pending the results of the police inquiry. Cortreneo also thought the alleged robbery was an inside job. "The person knew exactly whut he wanted," he explained. "It looks like he had lots of time, for my speaker wires were not slashed." Cortreneo said his room was not doublelocked. Second Burglary This was the second major burglary at the Wellington in less than a year. Over $2,000 worth of student items were stolen during last year's Christmas vacation break. Director of Student Housing John Welty said Thursday that he has talked with the Wellington management about the affair and has requested a written report on the thefts from Wellington Dorm Director Fred Litt. HOTEL l-'.'.| OTEL mt.LLllKaiC) |ip*<» ^^^to"*"" The Hotel Wellington Annex was the *cene of Malta this past Thanksgiving races* according to students who live there. Welty said he would discuss with the Wellington management how to prevent further vacation thefts. He added "double-locking is probably the best way to insure against theft. Lack of Security The unnamed student was incensed over what he termed lack of security at the Wellington. He said an elderly guard employed "for insurance purposes only," was the hotel's only security. The student claimed that despite last year's major robbery and a series of petty thefts throughout this semester, the management tailed to provide adequate protection for student poscssions. S t u d e n t r e s i d e n t s at the Wellington can request that their doors be double-locked. The Wellington management paid restitution for lust yeur's thefts alter un insurance adjustor hud assessed the value of the stolen goods. Wellington Building Manager Eugen Huvehost said he didn't know of any action the hotel was taking. building," he said. Rickman said the three student residents hud been living in the third lloor apartment of the building for 17 days before the'fire broke out. The student residents were George DcLuca, Monica Leonards, and Ellen Deutschman. Dcutschman had complained to Tony Cheh of the United Tenants of Albany and to Rickman about heuting problems in the building two weeks before the fire. Cheh said Dcutschman hud not complained to City officials lor fear of rctuliation from Rickman. A total of six people were injured in the lire. Deutschman was listed in lair condition yesterday at Albany Medical Center where she is reportedly being treated for separated pelvic bones and other fractures suffered in a fall from the third story apartment during the fire. Former Utica mayor Dominick Assaro, Ralph Polk, James VanVorst, DcLuca and Leonards had all been hospitalized with injuries but have since been released. Mission Replies Are Processed mittee outlined their feelings on Based on this new report, which by Jonathan Hodges what the statement should contain. could constitute a major part of the A four-page report, representing Those recommendations are similar El'C's final recommendation for the summation of sixty responses to to the ones being presented now. revision of the mission statement, the SUNYA Statement of Mission, The memo stated that "the con- the same questions raised four will be submitted to the Educational cept of a University and the role of months ago concerning the statePolicy Council of the News the University at Albany usu Univer- ment have yet to be answered. University Senate A lew new ideas that arc contained , . within the next two sity Center needed to be clearly Analysis , stated." in the committee's report are verbose weeks. Now that committee suites that and buried amidst calls for The report, compiled by El'C's the mission statement should include clarifications and deletions in the Long-Range Planning Committee, u "commitment to and reaffirmation mission statement. The fifth groups the sixty replies into six of the concept ol a University" and u recommendation, for instance, calls general categories and recommends "declaration ol the special properties lor the faculty to wield u significant nine possible changes in the docuof a University Center." share of the power in governing ment. SUNYA. It reads: "The importance Academic Freedom For the most part, the committee's In the August memo to Shirley, to the University of collegiality of report deals in generalities rather the committee suited that "a com- faculty purticipation both in current than specifics. It recommends that mitment to the concept of academic governance and determining the the goals set forth for SUN Y A in the freedom must be explicit in the mis- lulure directions of the U niversity." document be summarized, but only sion statement." vaguely outlines what should be inhour months Inter thecommittre INDEX cluded in the section. recommends that the revised mission ASPects 1a-12a University Reaffirmed statement include a "commitment to Classified 13 At the top of the list was a call for a academic freedom." Editorial 9 reaffirmation of the concept of a unThe memo cited that "the new Graffiti 12 iversity and a need to stress commitment to public policy Letter* 8-9 SUNYA's desire to grow. The only unulysis needs to be clearly outlined Movie Timetable 2a specific suggestion was to update a to the university community." New* 1-7 passage in the mission statement In the committee's latest report, Newebrlels 2 dealing with academic freedom that the second recommendation is to Preview 2a was written in 1915. "isolate and set off the discussion of Sporta 14-18 In a memo sent in August to Assispublic policy analysis to stress and Zodiac New* 7 tant to the President Robert Shirley express more clearly the fact that it is by the Planning Committee before to be an added element to the univerBasketball Schedules the mission statement was released sity." aeo page IS for general circulation, the com-