"I.- I. Water Shut Off in Dorms Due to Sewer Line Break

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download ""I.- I. Water Shut Off in Dorms Due to Sewer Line Break"

Transcription

1 F =.,pp ML {Statesman v Dstrbutedfree of charge throughout mpus and communty eerymony A Frdy WEDNESDAY MAY Stony Brook, New Yek Volume 8 Number 8 Arts Phase Two Buldng Cosruto of the Soca and Behavoraldcw Budm whch wn be adal to te Loct, the Humantes Buld gand te cot od complex, wl also ad the agng lod ndustry, n whch u ep t _ m N percent The deadlne for the of t* eombe wa Tueslay, May 6, but t Une obt ed a extenson fom the contrctor EW. Haowl ad Company of Babylon. " would say we w stat whn days of an order to proeeed," sad Ralph Hoaw, Jr., a partner n the compay. He sad that be d s e not know just when he wll receve penalsoo fa tte State Unversty Constructon Fund, bt t mmnent. That's an we know." Howell estmated that the buldng wl be completed n about months ftam ff tm constructon begns. When asked f he antcpates any problems wth constructon deadlnes and costs due to t dd ay, Howell sad, "We're always faced wth a s but that s a common problem on all pro s Stony Brook s also watng to receve approval for the second phase of the Fne Arts d, would make the campus a cultural center n uffolk County. The for s ths Fnday. Tbe Socal and B o Scences VA at, together wth the new fne arts compex, no "te ast two major peces of the Stony Brook pu zfo," sa Hochbrueckner. Hochbnueckner ha set e pldtg of g a _aw prorty. "Mabe n a coa_ at yam we cm kwck off MWdDq," he sm. % ftwo ". Water Shut Off n Dorms Due to Sewer Lne Break Last December, Polty Presdent Gerry Mangnell (left) and the undergraduate student government led 6 students n a demonstraton protestng cuts n the Resdental College Program (RCP). Now, wth the RCP agan threatened wth cutbacks, Polty has called for another demonstraton on Thursday. Story on Page Statesman Annual Athletc Awards A Rerun of Last December? Once a year, the campus communty pcks the people that t feels are the outstandng fgures n Stony Brook sports. The Statesman athlete and coach of the year awards are gven annually to these selected ndvduals. Stones on Pages 89 By PHLP CASE The second major sewer lne breakage n two days left the campus waterless yesterday, except for sx academc buldngs n whch water was made avalable to campus resdents. The breakage, whch occurred off Mll and Gnarled Hollow Roads n Setauket, requred the efforts of the Stony Brook physcal plant crew, whch worked for most of the day reparng the damage. Late yesterday afternoon, Unversty offcals antcpated that the break would be repared by 8 p.m., and that water would be fully restored by am. today. Thrd and Fourth The sewage lne breaks of the last two days are the thrd and fourth n recent weeks. On Aprl, a sewage break caused campus water to be cut for throe hours, as Unversty sewage flooded the basement of Poquott resdent Peter Haywood. A more extens break on Aprl 7 caused a mpete campus water shutoff, more offcamp ood g ad traffc delays on Route 5A. Th es of whether the state or we local ew». SW dktrd S smmd h tade PU' n rat A At pet, fe ' Xw e f s Ws by 'jjw b pumped to the Ad aaon aeaeplantk whch treaft the sows^ and releae t to the Reav h The pta! >. state pap put of the _nu fnam" but du _wd b a"_wft for the plant, wh p e only one dw at* "V level of prfato.mane advawood amuf d* by Plants ban two or thrde«pufcat l 'Fmd~~~~~~~~ % WORKMEN at Ah te. A Suffolk County report _daad la May of 97 poed thst anow wwa plnt be bult n the _ MMe to a bw ea_ v ad sewag. Thphat wodd has a m»c6 large y md UN" afll~e fchnology. (B)eMt) _m qpow Preddwt f PM s lm MB M ^ B^ ~. B lm B WM~~la^ BM M B lmmh M M on AS pkat Vat toy Set auk vc A toato d Gt, Ca wo on, n t * SocUl/Behavoral lolpl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Scences Buldng Approved. *.dplm Ml ' By JAY BARS Governor Hugh Carey has agreed to provde funds for the constructon of the Socal and Behavoral Scences Buldng. The Dvson of the Budget had prevously advsed aganst fundng the $ mllon project. 'The Governor called me personally to tell me that the buldng was approved," sad Assemblyman George Hochbrueckner (DCoram), who was nstrumental n persuadng the Governor to seek an extenson of the deadlne for a $5 mllon federal grant so that the Dvson of the Budget's decson could be revewed. "We have a governor wth an open ear," Hochbrueckner sad. The decson came Monday afternoon after the Governor met wth Hochbrueckner, Assembly Leader Stanley Stengut and a member of the Governor's staff. However, last week before Carey approved the constructon, the Deputy Drector of the Budget sad that the buldng would not be started"certanly not ths year, from our pont of vew." The Dvson of the Budget decded to revew the necessty of the buldng, even though t was approved by the State legslature last year. Unversty offcals and legslators have been fghtng for the buldng for months and consder ts approval a major vctory for the Unversty. " am deeply gratfed by the Governor's decson to contnue development of our unversty center n accordance wth ts detaled master plan," sad Unversty Presdent John Toll. "The Socal and Behavoral Scences Buldng s crucal to an orderly development of programs at our campus," Toll sad. One of the oor measons for o the on of the '% THE RECENTLY APPROVED SOCAL AND BEHAVORAL SCENCES BULDNG wll occupy the space desgnated by the X n the above schematc. buldng s the lack of hgher educatonal facltes on Long sland over the years, accordng to Assstant to the Presdent John Burness. "Stony Brook has always gven hghest prorty to admsson to graduates of the regon's communty colleges," Burness sad. "Durng recent years we have admtted more transfer students than freshmen. The vast majorty from these communty colleges are studyng n the socal and behavoral scences." Accordng to Bumess, about $ mllon had been spent on research and plannng for the Socal and Behavoral Scence Buldg and the propod Fle A OF

2 ~~~ S N~ews Brefs No Flghts Over Thaland The Unted States agreed today at Thaland's request to suspend ts removal of South Vetnamese acraft flown to Thaland by fleeng Vetnamese eftees, offcals n Bgok s The U.S. also auned an arlft of Cambodan refugees to Amerca twhch ncluded former Presdent Sau Kham Khoy. Camboda's now Communst backed rulers sad they would respect the natonal and terrtora ntegty of neghborng states but would not allow any foregn troops on ther sol. At least 5 of the 5 planes flown to Thaland were reported already aboard the U.S. carer MdwNy n the Gulf of Thaland by the tme Tha Foreg Mnster Chta Choonhvan announced the agreement. Wtnese sad U.S. Jolly Green Gant helcopters lfted A7 Danfly jets and F5 Freedom Fghters out of Utapao Ar Base n Thalland and eaned them off Sunday and Monday. Pentagon soues an Wahgo sad 5 of the jets and some C transports had be emoved, and Amecan sourae n Thaland sad up to plane had been taken out n all, but ths could not be confrmed by wtnesses. The Unted States clamed the planes because t suppled them to the forma Sagon Regme, but the new Communst government n South Vetam also damed them as the spols of war. Thaland, a U.S. aly that want to lve n peace wh ts neghbors, was caught n the mddle and decded to hold onto to planes. Krupsak Returns the Money? Leutenant Governor Mazy Anne Knak, who once pledged to turn back $, of her combned saay and expen, Wll apparently be a smaller mount than she p KRupsa sad last January she would tum beck $6, of her $6, annual salary and all of her $6,expene allowance. But n a sta ent ed lt week, the leuteat governor sad dh s turnng back only $,75 of her slay. n addton, records at tae Ste Dwnt of Audt and Contr show she has already ad for and ehed$, n oxne mxoey. An sde to Mss Krupcak sad the chdn do not sp et a s t dfference, "es a megbood fur, sadd Vrgna Cor, a specal assatfor P"emeo and comnt aes "t Wa weor been workd ot" dw, adde_ *The leutenant goveroo never sat down and worked out the whole thng on how son to do t." Ford Upset Over Refugees PW sdent Geul Ford wa quoed ty as syng oppoeton to brngng Vetnameseg c P to te Unted States "makes me Seate pu a Leder Hugh Scott (R ylana) _eecrbed Fold's aftr a GOP leadershp meetng at the Wht* House. The leade were brefed by L Dean Brown, coordnator of the admnston's rehee program. As the s $57 mllonf up to 5, ndochns refugees drew hard and metmes hostle questonng n Congress, three e ntroduced a bll to authorze "such sums as may be wcessary" to p n h atef The bll was submwed by o Jacob K javts (RNew York), habowe Fell (DRhode bland), and A Rbcoff (DConoectcut). Fel called t "the dot thng to do." Javts sad A would not lot tbe fean overrde ther tradton of neroy to rfugse Cardnal Mndszenty Des Josee C l Ao ty, a Cdld Wa fgure who spent 5 yea o te Unted Mabs mssn n Budaest as a refugee from lhugapy's Gommunt ruen, ded n Venna today aftr surgery, the Cathol PressServce reported. lb wu 8. A _ for the Venna k adocese sad Mnd enty, the fomwr of Hu_y, oed at the Brothers of Mercy Hosptal be had _e a urlog operaton earler n the day. Mndszenty spent year of hs lfe, except for four days, ether n prson or as a refugee n the US. msson. Hs bref tme of fwredom came n 956 durng the llfated Hnaran Revoluton. n 99 Communsts tortured hm and sentenced hm to lfe mprsonment for fghtng the Red takeover of hs country. He left the msson for Rome n 97 after the Hungran government sad t had granted hm amnesty. j ~~~~~~~~~~m Ths s the last ssue of Statesman ths semester. However, the newspaper wll be publshng a weekly summer edton. Dstrbuted both on and off campus begnnng the week of May 6, the paper wll cover events both at the Unversty and n the local communty. Subscrptons for Summer Statesman can be obtaned for $.5 by sendng a check or money order to Statesman, Box AE, Stony Brook, N.Y. 79. S^ ^~~~~ l Reopen the Kennedy nvestgaton Say Warren Commsson Crtcs Three forensc pathologt&say an ndependent panel of experts should be allowed to examne medcal evdence gathered n the nvestgaton of former Presdent John F. Kennedy's assassnaton. The three sad Monday the nvestgaton should be reopened and the government should release autopsy materals wthheld snce 96 when Kennedy was shot and klled n Dallas. Cyrl H. Wecht, Allegheny County, Pennsylvana coroner and a longtme crtc of the Warren Commsson nvestgaton, sad the group s askng that an ndependent panel "just do, from the standpont of scentfc nvestgaton n the JFK case, what any good homcde squad, crme laboratory, etc. s dong hundreds of tmes each day n the Unted States of Amerca." Wecht, who has sought for several years to pn access to the medcal evdence, has dsputed the Warren Commsson concluson that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone n the assassnaton. Appearng wth Wecht were Dr. Robert Jolng of Phoenx, Arzona. presdent of the Amercan Academy of Forensc Scences, and Herbert L. MacDonnell, professor of crmnalstcs at Elmra College n ~~~~=m% Real Keystone Cops n the tradton of the Keystone Kops, a polce car was stolen by a htchhker, offcers chased each other around rural Oakland County, Mchgan lookng for t, and one cop shot hs own car. 'Ths knda stuff just an't supposed to happen," a perplexed offcer sad n tryng to explan the ncdent n whch a deputy sherff also shot another polce car and two crusers were wrecked. Sergeant Davd Odett, 9, a sx year veteran on the Pontac Townshp polce force, sad the trouble began when he stopped a htchhker Sunday nght. Odett put the htchhker n the back seat of hs cruser whle he went to retreve a paper bag he saw the man throw n some bushes. The htchhker leaped over the seat and took off n the polce car and left Odett holdng the bag whch contaned a bottle of wne and two bottles of beer. Odett fred a shot and flattened a rear tre on hs own polce car, but the cruser kept gong. Then usng hs portable rado, he called for help. The only other offcer patrollng the townshp sped off to help and a countywde alert was ssued for the stolen cruser. As polce contnued to search for the mssng car, two unversty polcemen patrollng n separate crusers spotted the other Pontac Townshp offcer respondng to hs comrade's call for help and started chasng hs polce car, thnkng t was the stolen vehcle. Then, Deputy Charles Eno parked hs cruser across the road to stop the speedng vehcle actually the second townshp patrol car and fred a shot as t came toward hm. Wth perfect am, he shot out the left front tre. The car ground to a halt and the startled Pontac Townshp offcer emerged. But the second unversty polce car stll was n hot pursut. Unable to stop, t plowed nto the roadblock. Both the deputy's car and the unversty polce car were damaged extensvely, but no one was njured. Trhe stolen polce car was recovered an hour later n the parkng lot..., _ Comng. Jolng urged that Congress reopen the nvestgatons of the kllngs of both Kennedy and hs brother, Robert, who was shot n Los Angeles n 968. The three pathologsts crtczed the Rockefeller Commsson nvestgaton of allegatons about the a naton of John Kennedy. The Rockefeller Commsson has expanded ts nvestgaton of domestc actvtes of the Central ntellgence Agency (CA) to examne allegatons that the agency had a role n the Kennedy shootng. Wecht sad that Davd W. Beln, staff drector of the Rockefeller Commsson, also served wth the commsson headed by the late Chef Justce Earl Warren when t nvestgated the Kennedy assassnaton : Wecht called Beln "one of the prncpal archtects of the Warren report, a man who has spent much of the past years defendng the report and attackng ts crtcs." Wecht also sad a panel of medcal experts apponted by Beln has done nothng to obtan all the medcal evdence avalable. Government Dd Not nterfere Wth Attca Defense Preparaton Buffalo (AP) A judge ruled today that government agence dd not nterfere wth or spy on the defense for nmates ndcted on varous charges as a result of the 97,Attca prson rebellon. Justce Joseph S. Mattna of State Supreme Court,, who conducted a lengy hearng nto defense allegatons of governmental msconduct, sad he found there was "no governmental nteference, msconduct or survellance of any Attca defendant." He cted n partcular former nmate Bernard Strobe, charged wth murder n the death of fellow nmate Bary Schwartz. Mattna nterrupted Stroble's tral to conduct the hearng. Mattna dened a defense moton to dsmss the chup aganst Stroble on the grounds of governmental msconduct and ordered jury selecton resumed. The judge also descrbed as "ery vague" testmony by Mary Jo Cook of Rochester, a pad Federal Bureau of nvestgaton (FB) nformer who sad she sped on the Attca defense organzaton. The FB has admtted she worked for the federal agency, but not as an Attca nformer. Defense lawyers Ernest Goodman and Haywood Bums l had argued that the hearngs establshed that government agents had nfltrated the defense camp and that a close workng and socal relatonshp exsted between the FB, State Polce and the prosecuton staff. Cook sad she was hred by the FB to nfltrate the Vetnam Veterans Aganst the WarWnter Solder organzaton. Because of that group's closeness to the Attca defense organzaton, she sad, she soon began workng on some defense projects and obtaned senstve materal that she passed on to the FB. Prosecutng lawyers repeatedly pressed her for specfc nformaton about the materal she clamed to have reported to the FB. She sad she had dffculty recallng detals. Her FB contact, Agent Gary Lash, acknowledged payng Cook for nformaton about the veterans group, but sad he learned nothng from her about the Attca defense legal strategy or planned courtroom tactcs. He sad the only nformaton he passed on to state nves tors was about planned Attca demonstratons. Durng the hearng, Mattna examned secret FB fles about Cook and sad he found nothng n the records that was relevant to the Attca defense. The nqury led to the callng of Anthony G. Smonett, the chef Attca prosecutor, for testmony. Smonett sad the state prosecutors never receved nformaton from the FB, Cook or any other nformer about Attca legal defense strategy. %, Correcton An artcle n the Frday ssue of Statesman ncorrectly lsted the cosponsor of a harp concert as the CED D e p art me n t. T h e cosponsor was the CED (Contnung Educaton) Student Government. Page STATESMAN May 7, 975

3 Changes n Resdental College Program Dsputes= By DAVD SPGEL Student representatves met wth members of the Admnstraton last nght to dscuss the Housng Offce's proposed restructurng of the Resdental College Program (RCP). The restructurng plan would nclude a new herarchy for the RCP, headed by the newlycreated poston of Resdental Lfe Drector. Ths person would be n charge of the mantenance, gudance, and programs n the resdental colleges. Accordng to Actng Assstant Vce Presdent for Student Affars Robert Moeller, a partcpant n last nght's meetng, the proposed plan wll "ntegrate admnstraton and Resdental College Program nto a more workable whole." Moeller added that the proposed The new Senor and Junor Representatves for the academc year were elected today n a runoff electon. George Werzbck won the electon for senor representatve over the ncumbent Anne Fnkelman n a vote of 87. Seth Mannor won for junor representatve over hs opponent Phylls Veglante n a vote of 89. As the above canddates dd not receve an absolute majorty of the votes cast n last Thursday's electon, a runoff electon was scheduled for yesterday. Students placed ther votes n the Stony Brook Unon from 8 a.m. untl 7 p.m. yesterday. Concerns Werzbck sad that he hoped to "mprove Polty" by gettng "more student nvolvement" n Polty. He plan wll restrct program coordnators to $, a year, plus a free room, a steep reducton from ther present salares. Moeller sad that ths conforms to 'fscal realty." The students meetng wth Vce Presdent for Student Affars Elzabeth Wadwsorth, Moeller, and Housng Drector Roger Phelps ncluded RA's, MA's program coordnators, and Polty representatves. These students expressed dssatsfacton wth the Housng Offce's proposed plan. Polty Resdental CoUege Coordnator Kevn Young sad that the "tmng of ths decson was done to restrct student nput and student reacton to ths decson." Yound crtczed the Housng Offce's New Polty Representatves To Take Offce Next Year StE MKAMUOR sad that he planned "for the concerns of the senor class." Marmor sad that he wanted to make the Faculty Student Assocaton "more reponsve to the demands of our fellow students." Marmor sad that demonstratons are the most effectve tactc students have n dealng wth the Admnstraton. Polty Presdent Gerry Mangnell sad that "too few people showed up" to vote because Polty only provded the campus wth one pollng place. "Democratc concepts should not be dctated by economc constrants. We must commt more money for electons," he sad. " plan to publsh regular reports usng the Polty Corner n Statesman to nform students on progress n Polty," sad nlor. UEORGE WERZBKK proposed herarchy for the resdental colleges. "People wll be torn between Pronra Coordnators and Resdental Advsors" 9 he sad. "t takes away trusted persons [program coordnators] from Resdental College control." Presently, each college legstue selects the buldng's poram coordnator, but, under the p d plan, the Quad Drector wll have control over both the newlycreated post of resdental advsor as well as the selecton of progm aotos Tbe alternatve plan presented by the student repentatves "uses the same budget, but changes postons aroundn., sad Young, who added that the pban decentralzes the roll of the quad manager, restrctng the post to overseeng the MAs, the mal clerks, and the resdenal s. Wadsworth defended the Admnstraton's pan's tmng and substance. "Ths g ton COUldt have happened before becausse nformaton t was based on was not avalable before," Wadsworth sad. n defendng Xh mto of.w t toegrtate all pf Mo ad resdental staff," a g at the pnoposed changes won a raut of "fscal ea aad Student Affatrs dvdonal ag"they wnbeg a do now rather than next yer beae have to ptr mdy to operate by next year," she ad. dwo Md ttot 8t _ At oxt suet Al n efm wom on th proposed plan t n faom or qustoanelzmaet to RAs, *As. and P T w~~~te _ * were oened *e.m PbUty Pesdent %o AA dad w w. n e o dudet _pt 8tu t Affa mke for wa on "the of esa bt the role of MA and A n saw MSO * that her dea of sdudet _om *s a wpd deaot t _t, p At the pst tme, a a s scheduled for Thus at pm. n the Admnstraton Buld to pr the changes. ELZABETH WADSWOgTH f mnbum x Amr C Pl yw Ysterday to dscuss the proposyd restruturn of tham" R. C s, ^r^ Electrcty to Be Shut Off: : All electrc power wll be cut off ths mornng to buldngs n G and H Quads to allow for the nstallaton of new electrc equpment. A spokesman for the Physcal Plant sad that power would be cut off to each buldng for about 5 mnutes between the hours of 8: a.m. and 9: a m. The electrcal shutoff would allow for a swtchover to new feeder cables. He sad that the nfrmary would also be wthout power for a short perod of tme begnnng at 8:5 a.m. Late last SOt, the Polty Hotlne began o take acton aganst the scheduled outages, warnng students that ther alarm clocks mght not wake them n tme for fnas Hotlne ebers called admnstraton n atep to prevente the early mornng Hotlne Coordnator abskns 8 t at he contacted U dpnt John Toll, who ad tht dnce XeO ntaltnwas beng dam by a contractor, Om Unversty could not at the tme that the b would b completed. Sskn sad that Toll wl contact A cademc t Sdney Gelber to mawe some a wgement for any students who msed fnals bee_ of the blackout. Mantenance also umounoed tlut power wll be cut off to several buldngs on May 9 for hours startng at 8 aj A ==oo Bology and Health Scence Departments to Mergee By RUTH BONAPACE Plans for the consoldaton of the Bologcal Scences and Basc Health Scences departments were announced by Unversty Presdent John Toll at a Unverstywde Faculty Senate meetng Monday nght. Toll sad that Academc Vce Presdent Sdney Gelber has recommended "a tentatve proposal for coordnaton and consoldaton of these two campus unts nto a new collegate structure, a College of Basc Lfe Scences." The proposed changes are admnstratve n nature, requrng no budgetary or currculum alteratons and may be mplemented wth Board of Trustee approval, Toll sad at a campus meda press conference last week. He sad that the proposal had been "evolvng" for over a year, and that he expected to make a decson on the reorganzaton early ths summer n order to facltate ts mplementaton for the fall semester. A meetng of representatves of the School of Basc Health Scences wll be held Monday to dscuss the matter, he sad. Structure Needed Dstngushed Professor of Bology Bentley Glass, a former academc vce presdent, sad last nght that although he s not famlar wth the detals of the plan, he beleved that "some structure s needed that would brng ths [consoldaton] about because the Dvson of Bologcal Scences "needs a closer relatonshp wth the Basc Health Scences." However, Glass sad that "t s mportant that the Bologcal Scences not lose ther close assocaton wth the arts and scences" porton of the campus such as wth the Chemstry and psychology Departments. f the consoldaton should occur, students would stll regster for courses under ther respectve departments, sad Toll. He suggested that n the future, the consoldaton "may open up the potentalty" for a combned premed medcal program n whch students may coordnate ther studes to gear them towards a medcal school currculum. Both Bologcal Scences Provost Albert Carlson and Basc Health Scences Dean Arthur Upton want to relnqush ther admnstratve postons n order to pursue ther research next year, sad Toll. Rather than refll those postons at ths tme, Toll sad that ths would be an opportune tme to reorganze those departments creatng a dean and assocate dean of Base Lfe Scences nstead. Natural Step Toll sad that the coordnaton of the departments would be a natural step because there we presently faculty members who teach courses n both dvsons and because the School of Basc Health Scences nstructon for students both n the Health Scences and n the Arts and Scences. The new college would nclude, from the Dvson of Bologcal Scences: the Departments of Bocesy; Cellular and Comparatve Bology and Ecology and Evoluton; and from the School of Bac Health Scences: the Departments of Anatomc S e, Mcrobology, Pathology, Pharmacologcal Scences, and Physology and Bophyscs. The Unversty Senate Steerng Commttee and the Commttee on Admnstratve Revew are coordnatng the process of obtanng faculty nput from all Unversty departments because such a consoldaton "clearly would have a sgnfcant mpact on the Unversty as a whole," sad Toll. May 7,975 STATESMAN Page

4 PRlEVENT TVEFT! Regster your bke FREE courtesy of BkeRders of Amercas nc. and SASU. The most successful system. l f _, ^H nanlec ny law entorcement agences throughout the* world s the DENTFAX SYSTEM. ^L Your personal DENTlAX NUMBER s scrbed onto your bke and the number s fed nto the Central Computer Bank allowng mmedate dentfcaton of the owners name from anywhere n the Unted* States.. Over 5, bkes have been successfully regstered. Regster your bke now a.. FREE. N. Frday, May 9, 975 of f of A, ON do Al.AM L * f.n lpm XtFO%7 ~lv A L U a"uw X T n front of Student Unon Bldg. z r OF BkeRders of Amerca, nc. 7 East 6th Street New York, New York () SPONSORED BY SASU 5 m Page STATESMAN May 7, 975

5 Lbrary Extends Hours The Lbrary has extended ts hours ths weekend to help students prepare for upcomng fnals scheduled to take place next week. On Frday, May 9, the reserve, reference, and perodcals rooms wll be open from 5 pm. untl a.m. The stacks, crculaton desk, and the musc room wll be open from 5 to p.m. On Saturday, May, all the above lsted sectons wll be open from a.m. untl 5 p.m. On Sunday, the Lbrary wll follow ts usual schedule and wll be open from p.m. untl am..,'.., r.. n, > :,, f»a«\ :.\. m 'gerve room r, BF H r"m.^.woo^^ gm m 'tat tr ltb N THE coventry mall hand carved f tooled leather COME TO WHERE T'S MADE t o% a *k"o *BAGS WALLETSoVSORSo H*ATSo 5 * WATCHBANDS * KEY R NGS M HANDMADE STERLNG JEWELRY ) AUTHENTC W AMERCAN NDAN JEWELRY MNNETONKA MOCCASNS M lcustom MADE SANDALS ftx All belts custom ftted, and we carry a large JJ selecton of buckles. N SEE OUR UNUSUAL DSPLAY OF PCTURES ""orgnal works of art carved n eather" custom work our specalty 6 Nesonset Hwy. & Stony Brook Rd. E Stony Brook, 7566 a MON. thru WED.6, THURS. L FR.9, SAT.6 TrrrffrrM g ash~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ B 9 «a; STOP LOOKNG for a good parttme job!! 'PMQ *Good Pay AULNtC HaaaB~raaapr *New Opportunm *Career Tranng *Regular Promotons *Men and Women Elgble EARN $ FOR ONE WEEKEND PER MONTH, AM TRAN FOR A REWARDNG CAREER N THE T ceanel SKLL OF YOUR CHOCE. GETTNG NVOLVED BECAUSE AMERCA NEEDS US 7 < W FOR MORE NFORMATON (o Oblmtton) CLP AND MAL TO: [ ARMY RESERVE OPPORTUNTES, WEST DEVON AVE. RM. 6, CHCAGO, LLNOS 66! A&JF AGE CTY STATES: ZP PHONE e m ff PAYS TO GO TO EETNGS " L THE LBRARY wll expand ts hours ths weekend. CSEA Panel s Apponted Albany (AP)State legslatve leaders have apponted a panel of sx Republcans and sx Democrats to try to settle a contract dspute between the state and the Cvl Servce Employes Assocaton (CSEA). The commttee ncludes sx Assemblymen and sx Senators four Democrats and two Republcans from the Democratcontrolled Assembly and four Republcans and two Democrats f rom the Republcandomnated Senate. Named as coharmen of the panel Tuesday were State Senator John March (RStaten dand),who s chaddm of the Senate Face Commttee, and Anssemby S n GF Co (DEre), wbo has an prevous M P coldttees and s carman oftheablmy Cmmttee on Government_[ The pae must recommend lo laton to revolve the wma dspute betwen the state and the CSEA, wbce represents 7, state workers. Governor Kugh Carey threw the problem to the p ture last week wben he rejected a factfnders' recommendaton for a sx percent acrossthexxad pay rase. Carey's proposed package called nstead for ncreases whch he sad amounted to a.5 percent pay rase. Negotators for the state and the CSEA frst sat down at a negotaton table under provsons of a wage reopener clause last January. The unon has snce called off two threatened strkes and a threatened job acton. Antpasto Mnestron Soup Baked Lasagna Chcken Cacctore Drawngs for Mller Beer TShrts and Frbees»rn & t sem Yardars presents Fnals Blast at Thursday, May 8 Garlc Bread Tossed Salad Torton Glas of Beer s The person who brngs the most EMPTY cans and bottles of Mller Beer to H Cafetera on Thursday, May 8 WNS! Drawngs every ' mnnutes fon Mllc TShrts and Frsbees. Cafetera Startng at 5: PM Dnner All for $.75 ALL FOR $.7 CONTEST LLER BEER CE May STATESMAN Page 5

6 B~t:^ s^v ^.""*"'Ad ""cakwh~~~~~~~~t/gf~~~~~a VK bw^ a beb S H LDD TCUT 9 M ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ W CRAG ~~FAN TA STCr., STREO DEA DON'T BUY ANY CAR. 5T T Ut UtlJ unll YOU HAV, E CHECKED BATTNG BARRYS LOW LOW PRCES CRAG~~,* Under Dash * Fast Forward & Ejecd * Stereo Caseffe Playeer *O Ou unbelevable prce of * Lmted Quo ntlty 9 Bg^^ \ *~~AM/FM Stere o 8 TrockdStereo ^lyy ',. Rad.* * T pe Ploye,. Frst tmem n AM /FM S~ pe ^.^R.^P^ \ N.Y. at Ths' ^ ^ Ra ck ^W~~jM^Rr Um~ted Swtf chng Sl ^_^. HOUSE OF AUDO PUST r "'* f 5 CAR SEREO WN5 SPE OND PA'A A PR TCE QUOTE. *: ': Batlng A _ ^ _ tr House of Audto Stores CENTEREACH HUNTNGTON 8 MDDLE COUNTRY RD. 7 WALT WHTMAN RD,. Rte. 5, Mle East of Rt. Opposte Walt Whtman Smthaven Mall Shoppng Center jr HOURS: MON.FR., SAT. 6, HUNTNGTON OPEN SUN. 6 J ORy Wrnu MLMW 'EL a le D ONS! CO ASH & CARR wvn FACTORY WVARRArNES Pa 6 STATESMANMay 7, 975

7 A,,.. ma e S.An, ^... ^.. ^ ^ ^ ^.^^.. ^ ^.fr t a Masters Degree Approved A masters degree n Poltcal Scence for publc servce careers has been ofrcally approved by the Admnstraton and wll begn ths September. The oneyear program wll requre credts. Accordng to NassauSuffolk Regonal Plannng Board Executve Drector Lee Koppelman, a member of the Poltcal Scence Department and a planner of the program, the program wll educate people for manageral and staff careers n publc employment. Koppelman sad that one of every fve members of the labor force works for a muncpal or educatonal nsttuton. The program s desgned to provde substantatve f knowledge, techncal sklls, and nternshp experence that can j lead to careers n publc employment, accordng to the PorlSfal Sence Denartment. A lmted number of spaces wll be reserved for publc employes who wsh to partcpate as parttme students. For further nformaton about the program, contact tce Graduate Studes Drector, Poltcal Scence Department, Stony Brook. ' Do' nm^~s~e C~~~~~~ *K X R : C~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ w D. 5 7V. l.. ',.AT THE * N 975 THESE UN ^^>^.^<^; ^A^]^ ^,^^n: T~ AMLON M8. thnt 5 U TM ZZU R A Byo vraw r NEWYORK '. 9a aler STEA" A Ao aejet!f M! t~~~~~~a,j. 6 ALL R EFRGERATORS (n WORKNG Condton Only) WLL BE PCKED UP ON CAMPUS THRU THE SUMMER CASH PAD ON PCKWUP *"Refrgerator Kng 98'99 CA LL ANYTME! F e TflONE «~~M &9 RNAMnTT Wt SUPER SZZLCs : SH W S ( o c. t"#: &. STEAKH y=p" SRLON STEAK.A8 af. MAn s ^f oft STEAK SANDWCH M' tw " go E F LET MGNON A d%;. TOP SFRLON Ad. ow % W a BURGER LUNCorft^ VcSHL ts S lae JJsarj< Lte LUC SEAUoOD MON. te»at. t" O EACH LUCH CLUDES FR. ; t:.s '~~m, l W. A N ST. _ T, ant SmTMTOWN. N. Y.?. (, o w ; : l t ; ^ } *a, ^=^ ;.= +;,:,::."..~~~~~~.. 7 ; '' a^ la Vv., A:. /.. ' *, *& X z *.. as; ^ d. l t Ado ^. S Hf+;L fr\~ : m e<s four : : : '';''* a' =.' /* D ** ^ *, : '.', ; ^ ' ** an _, Al,,., a,_ 'A. X T h T _ C, :??? ": S '^^...'.^** Se: *: l *" T.: D ' ''' 'rl ': * * ; '. l *\ ; s fe ': ; > < ^ t ; e^t,.f ^f.>,re A:.^ w:w,*^^ t^ ' '* ^ar..'.^ ^)": <.' ;**' X :,? _ "^., v ''y.,'.'' ^^^ : '...^ A LEE KOPPELMAN Alcohol Rafflng Now Legal! New York (AP)The Statc! Lquor Authorty has put the J stamp of legalty on the!,. longstandng custom of rafflng off alcoholc beverages at func rasng affars. ; For years, the Authorty had permtted manufacturers an*, wholesalers of atcohotbeverages to donate thproducts for fundrasng affar by bona fde chartabl relgous, educatonal and cvorganzatons..techncally, whle t; organzatons could accept t!! donatons they coud not lega ' resell them. However, a. authorty spokesman bad tl. such rafflng or resellng wu; wdespread and general * overlooked. Chaman Mchael Roth a!nounced yesterday thal ' henceforth the authorty svvlf se a "chartable permt" to such organzatons, legalzng teak of the alcoholc beverages. '* <* ' ' : mbarnes$ Noble Bookstores wll buy all your current edton college ' textbooks at the hghest possble prces,up 6 lv Students, teacdhersasf f 5% of lst prce. ' \ s about anybody ownng current;eton textbooks can brng them n to our Centereach store and get top prces, whether the books arew ^ used on your campus or not. A Jr Come rr now and turn. ` those books nto cash. They'll never b worth : more than rght now * : '*.'" at ness.,. *. t * ": "..: ' \E. A\... p;o ;."t K :', / *' ^. :»*: <w,.,. ",,' "*».,*.: 7, a.^ * * ; ^ t '* L; :^ *.' ^ t ". _ * ^ Masters ShoppngfPfaza Centereach Tel 987 Specal buybackhours: 6 MonFr v Am Sat 'S ; t ^y Ad e 'v f e, ', sy,,., * '"R"*^^ :::Ew ^ '* Sr ";' ^ *. ' *\.."*" ' '.* ^ T^.^ z y t. d n ' : : ^l^ t,. ^ n a a '. s ^ ^ S ^ v a,..\. * _^ca r ^ ' * : z... _ M. *. ' ^.'' :... <' ^ *., ; ; ^ e ^ A * K w f at ^ J!.'V* *^ \ X l O May STATESMAN Pa 7e

8 r g '' ^ m E SUPERTRAMrP The #l group n England! LME OF THE CENTURY The #l album n England! r're now on ther frst Amercan r and they'e comng your way! 975 f a Sounds best on m SCOOP RECORDS SPRNG FEVER SALE NOW THRU MAY 9, 975 ONLY $.S9 each XM" : JOE COCKER SPEAL FRONA&M! CAN STAND A LTTLE RAN E= A = = 7 '^. ncbades *YouAreSoBeautfulr 975 Sounds best on 'f you wannaaget to heavenl you gotta hear "JackeBlse^! THE OZARK MOUNTAN DAREDEVLS T'L SHNE WHEN T SHNES S. B. UNON MON.FR. PM ARCKWAKEMAN E HFROM A&M! THE MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF G ARTHUR AND THE KNGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE Also avalable n Quad dsc! 975 M Sounds best on J A &Ts A rva"vmw 975 Sounds best on B;ONE MAGC! Mangone's debut on A&M RASE THE CLawDS AWAY The AlN debut album from a "Renassance Muscan7A brllant ohesa l/jazz fuson. S d 97o5fbn Sounds best cm[f"5 A HUMBLE PE SPECAL FROM A&M! STREET RATS New harddrvng rock from one of England's premer heavy metal bands. 975 nm Sounds best on QUANTTES LMTED Other A & M Artsts on Sale QUANTTES LMTED NAT ADDERLEY SANDY DENNY CHUCK MANGONE PROCOL HARUM HERB ALPERT & THE TJUANA BRASS PAUL DESMOND HERBE MANN RCK ROBERTS ARMAGEDDON CHERYL DLCHER GROUCHO MARX THE SANDPPERS FRANKLYN AJAYNE DLLARD & CLARK BLL MEDLEY TOM SCOTT HOYT AXTON ENGLAND DAN & JOHN FORD COLEY SERGO MENDES & BRASL '77 SPOOKY TOOTH BURT BACHARACH ESPERANTO LEE MCHAELS STATUS QUO JOAN BAEZ FARPORT CONVENTON LZA MNNELL CAT STEVENS BAJA MARMBA BAND FLYNG BURRTO BROTHERS WES MONTGOMERY STEALERS WHEEL MARC BENNO PETER FRAMPTON THE MOVE STRAWBS GEORGE BENSON FREE MCHAEL MURPHEY SUPERTRAMP GALLAGHER & LYLE NAZARETH GNO VANNELL BOOKER T. & PRSCLLA LTD PHL OCHS MELVN VAN PEEBLES CARPENTERS NLS LOFGREN CARROLL O'CONNOR RCK WAKEMAN JOE COCKER MAGMA OZARK MOUNTAN DAREDEVLS TM WESBERG MCHEL COLOMBER HENRY GROSS THE PERSUASONS PAUL WLLAMS RTA COOLDGE LANHALL SHAWN PHLLPS KA WNDNG & JJ. JOHNSON MCHAEL D'ABO HOOKFOOT BLLY PRESTON PAUL WNTER Page 8 STATESMAN May 7, 975

9 Ford Dscusses Refugees Washngton (AP)Presdent Gerald Ford, reported earler as "damn mad" about negatve Amercan reacton to an nflux of Vetnamese refugees, sad last nght that new developments have encouraged hm. He confrmed that he had been "dsapponted and upset" over reports that some Amercans ddn't want the refugees n ths country. But resolutons supportng hs refugee resettlement program were passed late Tuesday by the AFLCO and the Amercan Jewsh Congress, Ford sad, and he found these encouragng. He also noted support from several governors. " am very proud" of those leaders, Ford sad. n other matters, Ford made these ponts: *he antcpates success at the next U.S.Sovet summt meetng on reachng a nuclear arms lmtaton treaty. *the Unted States wll contnue an actve foregn polcy n Asa, developng closer tes wth South Korea, Tawan and the Phlppnes. *the fall of Vetnam was "'a dffcult tme," but any precepton of a U.S. weakness s unreal. "We want any potental adversary to know we wll stand up to t." *the Warren Commsson, of whch he was a member, found no evdence of a connecton between Cuba and the assassnaton of Presdent John F. Kennedy. "We found no evdence of a conspracy." *he was surprsed at any skeptcsm that he would be a canddate for electon n 976 and announced that an nformal campagn plannng group s at work. *he was lookng for nput from Egyptan Presdnet Anwar Sadat and srael Prme Mnster Ytzhak Rabn as the Unted States reevaluates ts Mddle East polcy. But he sad hs planned meetngs wth these men do not mark the start of a new U.S. negotatng effort. *he sad he wshed more than, persons had taken advantage of hs clemency program for Vetnamera Mltary deserters and draft evaders. *he sad of the men who ded or were wounded n Vetnam, that " thnk ther sacrfce was not n van." He sad a commtment to the survvors contnues. But Vetnam domnated the news conference. For nstance, ^ Ford was asked about reports that U.S. ambassador Graham Martn had been neglgent n handlng the evacuaton from Sagor. Pontng out that all Amercans and, South Vetnamese were lfted out of the country n the face of the Communstled advance, Ford sad ths was a very successful evacuaton. "'ve never had much fath n Monday mornng quarterbacks," Ford sad. "Rather than be crtcal of someone who dd a good job, thnk we ought to prase hm." NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY NOTCE The dormtory telephone servce you had ths year wll end on May 6th, unless you ask us to dsconnect earler. For $5. credt, the telephone set must be returned to our Phone Center on the day of dscnnect. The Phone Center wll be open daly from 5/5 to 5/6 between the hours of 8 am. to 5 p.m. to accept returned nstruments. Please call the busness offce on 699 to make arrangements. *, 9anA AL&.... w. No M. Mo 6AN " 5 DONUTS FOR THE PRCE OF ;! Wff TSS l t lemory L net Hwy Pn Wed. Sa pcaer ( NE (N.caps b.caps NCwt. SJCCh< N 99 * (Smls otent B E Oo Vtan :hoce Wth COUPON AND YOUR,= STONY BROOKD. 5 OFTER AT CENTCRCAC BlO.ft lft RO ^ 'hf f fest Sh r om : uj^ j»~~~~~~~~6h p.m w MFr. 6:: pa.s. * *~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ r TNF HERO NN *wnf a 9llaH 'MN few W**# of or w 9 MSU mean S r pd.{"btr~j!? sad & FREF $ORA o som * Osa go* D* **.... * _ ALL ELECTRONC who EQUPMENT Alk dml. AL Sponsored y HLLEL There wll be representatves of the Go Kbbutz Alyaa Department at a table n the S.B. Unon Lobby. MondayFrday May 59 From ::X PM V Anyone nterested n spendng tme at (from a week to a lfetme) on a Kbbutz n srael s nvted to come bpeak wth tp these representatves. Free Llcdtus ex» and nformaton wll be avalable. Vtamn t worth a lttleb..com J your PATU DScol S OLY SORE DN N a 'S^ MDDLE COUNTRY Rd VENTER EACH May 7, 975 STATESMAN Page 9

10 ; WZW X XX WWW ^ MAff tm^ ^^ ^wa% ^ VXWX.&. FOR EXPERENCED LAWN HOUSE Pantng CARPENTRY Work ' t STAMP COLLECTOR? MEMORABLA COLLECTOR? Try Chrstmas Seals. Extraordnarly colorful, nostalgc, economcal, and a hobby that expands. U.S. seals began ssung annually n 97. Here's the starter package: 9797, 5 dfferent, all regular ssues, sngles, pars, blocks as ssued, complete. $7.5 p.p., ncludng lengthy worldwde prcelst. Lst : b alone: 5 cents, n stamps. Helen Carlson Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. 8 M ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ w A : P F a : p ; p * E e f' k X ' M w ~ M M MLM M m m m mf mf m m m f * ^ v v s ^ s v v v s s v ^ K Do you knot NE EED ;ED A SUMMER JOB? w THAT: Star Mal nter lance has many openngs for tax cab drvears! THAT: Drvng aatax( s an nterestng, wellpayng job! THAT: We can h«lp ' you get a Hack Lcense n days! THAT: We can arrange a mutually sutable schedule to ft yolur personal needs. CALL., WRTE OR COME N TO: STAR MAkNTENANCE CORP.! s w WMMM ww ww w qw[e v~~~~~~~~~~ ME MM vk v v v v X t Street Astora, N.Y. 5 t L 78 ~ ~~~~ E Contact Jm att J After 5 j Weekdays. Anytfmo ookends«reasonablex RATES g FREE ESTMATES,AdlL We & Lt atp SRAEL POET MOSHE TABENKN Wll be speakng on Frday. May 9 At : n P Math Tower, he wwl be speakng on ""PROSPECTS FOR PEACE"" After dnner 7: n Roth Cafetera, he wll be speakng on 'TRENDS N PERSONALTY SRAfEL LTERATURE" *or ""LTERATURE OF WAR9* LTERATURE OF MOURNNGV) Sp onsored by Amercan Professors for Peace n the Mddle East and by Hllel For nformaton, contact Prof. rwn Kra at 65 (for afternoon) or Rchard Segel at (for evenng myeal & lecture) WE PROTEST The recent acton of UNESCO n votng to wthold assstance from srael and n denyng srael the rght to partcpate n any of the regons nto whch UNESCO has dvded ts operatons has aroused worldwde ndgnaton. n protest aganst ths debasement of UNESCO nto a flagrantly partsan poltcal forum, nternatonally renowned scholars, wrters, artsts and scentsts, ncludng Nobel Prze wnners have refused further to partcpate n the actvtes of UNESCO. The followng s a rep.rnt of the declaraton of a number of leadng French ntellectuals. The cultural commsson of UNESCO has refused to nclude srael n any of ts regonal groupngs. As a result, the Jewsh State wll not be able to partcpate n any regonal actvty of UNESCO. One mght suppose that ths was to ndcate that srael and ts hertage belong to all of manknd. But no, srael has been placed nether n Asa (as was Australa) nor n Europe (as was Canada), to demonstrate that she belongs nowhere: namely srael does not exst. One should not be deceved by the "admnstratve" form of ths devce, for some states, whose systems are hardly partal to freedom of thought, arrogate to themselves the rght to determne to what regon of the world a country belongs. They have decded that srael does not have the rght to exst: therefore, she does not exst. Ths sprtual abolton of srael justfes n advance her physcal annhlaton. t s the extermnaton process perfected by the totaltaran regmes of the twenteth century. We know ts cost n lves of tens of mllons of men and women. UNESCO s the U.N. organzaton whose responsblty t s to safeguard educaton, scence, and culture. What has taken place represents a perverson, a reversal of ts true role. The undersgned henceforth refuse to collaborate n ths body so long as t does not prove, n regard to srael, ts fathfulness to ts own goals. Thousands of nternatonally renowned ndvduals have joned ths protest aganst UNESCO's acton aganst srael. The followng s a lst of Stony Brook faculty who have assocated themselves wth the above statement: Konrad 8bber. Prof. of French & Comparatve Lterature JONG Krz, Profoessr of Physcs Mrc holtz, Data Peor, Physcs Fred Wdne, Profor of Hstory Rkhad Kuel. oc Protessor of Hstory Jvdft W lhm, Assstant to the Drector, Offce of nternathmal Educaton Francs T. Bonner, Professor of Chemstry John Neweld, Profr of Theatre Arts Ja.cob ULkd, Assocate Lbrarlan Samuel R. Taub*, Graduate Assstant n Englsh Nloman. Jung, Head Reference Ubrarlan Werer T. Angress, Professor of Hstory Leonad Krasner, Professor of Psychology Jerome E. Snger, Professor of Socology Norman Goodman, Professor of Socology, Dept. Charman Charles E. Staley, Assocate Professor of Economcs Edward Amns, Professor of Economcs, Deprtment Charman Eugene Hedley. Assoc. Prof. of Educaton, Dept. Charman Jay C. Wllfars, Prof. of Poltcal Scence, Dept. Charman Harret Allentuch, Assocate Professor of French Unett* F. Brugnans, Professor of French Alan D. Entne, Assstant Academc Vce Presdent Sacha Wltnman, Assocate Professor of Socology Jacques Gulnman, Professor of Art, Dept. Charman Fredrc Levne, Assocate Professor of Psychology Kst Jamus, Professor of Economcs Ruth Cowen, Assstant Professor of Hstory Leonard R. PMs Aoclate Professor of French Anthonty V. Scabs, nstructor n talan Joseph A. Tl, Prof of talan Melao S. Mns. Assstant Professor of talan Ruben Weltsch, Assocate Profetsor of Hstory Hgp _,A Proaor Hstory Mrul Professor Emertus, Hofstra Unhvrty Barbara Waskn, Assstat of Educaton Wwlww" W M" S. SottllMOO. _ dpo r HMO" Rchrd.eW a all.w ofee F Wllam Lttle, Assstant Professor of Spansh Frank Myers, Assocate Professor of Poltcal Scence Vea Rony, Research Assocate, Equal Employment Opportunty E.M. Zmmermann, Prof. of French, Dept. Charman Ferdnand A. Rupln, Assoc. Prof. of German, Dept. Charman Roman Karst, Profor of German Rhoda Selvn Assant Dean for Undergraduate Study Oscar A. Haac, Profesor of French Robert D. Marcus, Actng Dean of Undergraduate Studes G. Norman Laldlaw, Professor of French Jeannne M. Goldman, Lecturer n French W.S. Dawes, Dept. of Economcs M.C. Wheller, Dept. of Anthropology E.N. Muller, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Bernard Tursky, Dept. of Poltcal Scence M. Lodge. Dept. of Poltcal Scence Rchard Reeder, Dept. of Poltcal Scence M. Schneder, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Mark Landls, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Lnda Campbell, Oept. of Poltcal Scence Thomas Jukam, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Lee Koppelman, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Keth Koppelman, Dept. of Poltcal Scence Frederck Brown, Professor of French Rchard R. Rapp, Assstant Professor of Hstory Carol Blum, Assocate Professor of French Anthony Rzzutto, Assocate Profteor of French Elzabeth P. R, Assstant Professor of French Charles Hoffmann, Professor of Economcs. Rose L. Coser, Prof. of Soc.Dean, Basc Health Scences Harold L. Fredman. Professor of Chemstry Allan K. Wldman, Assocate Professor of Hstory Joel T. Rosenthal, Professor of Hstory. Dept. Charman Donald Fry. Profess_ of Englsh, Drector of the Pronam John R. Russel. slt Pofessor of German n Comparatve LUterature "N" gm f. Jr F Martn Stevens, Professor of Englsh, Dept. Charman Davd V. Erdman, Profor of Englsh Earl G. Schrelber. Assstant Proftssor of Englsh Jackson T. Man, Prof. of Hstory, Drcetor, nsttute for Colonal Studes Mortmer Kreuter, Professor of Educaton, Actng Doan CED Rchard Kramer, Assstant Profesor of Musc Robert M. Levne, Assocate Professor of Hstory Samuel Berr, Assocate Professor of German Sarah Fuller, Assstant Professor of Musc, Actng Dept. Charman Peter Shaw, Assocate Professor of Englsh Jack Ludwg, Professor of Englsh Thomas Rogers, Assocate Professor of Englsh Mchele Lane, Lecturer n French Wllam Taylor, Professor of Hstory Herbert Welsnger, Dean of the Graduate School George W. Schuyler, Drector, beroamerwcan Studes Joel Bertz, Lecturer. Dept. of Germanc & Slavc Studes N.L. Belazs, Professor of Physcs Max Dresden, Professor of Physcs. nsttute of Theor. Phys. V. Tejera, Assocate Professor of Phlosophy Ruth Mller, Assocate Professor of Englsh E.J. Czerwnsk, Professor of Slavc Languages Davd Fox. Professor of Physcs B. Stroke, Adjunct Lecturer, Slavc Languages Frank Anshen, Assstant Professor of Lngustcs Koff Awooner, Assocate Professor of Englsh Merton L. Relchler, Center for Legl Studes Danel Z. Freednwn. Assocate Professor of Physcs Femmd Hayot, Vlstng Lecturer n Physcs Pee S. Kahn. Profeor, Charman. Oept. of Physcs Alfred Goldhaber, Assstant Professr of Physcs wrhwd Vasco, Area Spclst, Lbrary Aaron Carton. Profeor of Educaton Alex Baskn, Assstant Pro r of Educaton l Self man. Profnr of Educaton T stoatment s beng sent to the prs, to the Secretary Gral of the U.N., to the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.. and to the srel Consul : p n.new York. S "tues of support are ll ben9 acepted f you r nterested n ocatng yourself wth the abv ste t ment, please contact ether Prof. Konrd~erS65687, 76. orrchard Sel 7579, For onal nformaton, contact the Ad Hoc Protest Commttee, 69 Bank St., N.Y., N.Y., AHen Pollack, Charman. PaS STATESMAN May 7.975

11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ STONY BROOK BOOKSTORE ~STAT UNVRYO R OK.SvN ; RO.^. STATE UNVERSTY OF NEW' YORK. STONY BROOKt ^.Y 7N9) 6.,666 * ^ *v~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ May 7, 975 STATESMAN Page ^ Jl

12 Theatre n Revew The Yearns Productons: Generally Fne Showng By STEPHEN DEMBNER n the last ssue of Statesman durng the 977 school year, thenarts Edtor Mchael B. Kape made some observatons on the year n theatre at Stony Brook. Hs concluson read: All n all, ths year (977) was not a very good one for theatre at Stony Brook. There could have been more shows, and there could have been better shows. Maybe next year we can see more shows done better, along wth more nnovaton on students 9 parts. Hopefully, next year wll brng more muscals, more modem plays by the Theatre Department, the emergence of Stony Brook's frst real repertory groups and other mprovements. Whether those nvolved n theatre at Stony Brook took Kape's advce to heart, or whether they examned and mproved themselves on ther own s unknowable. What have cleary seen as arts edtor ths year, however, s a defnte mprovement n the overall qualty of theatre on campus. Best Plays Ths you has seen roughly the same number of plays produced on campus as last year. The overall qualty and professonalty of these productons, however, has markedly ncreased, especally n ontheatre Department companes. The two best plays of the year, ^low Dance on the Kllng Ground,* 9 and "Rasn n the Sun," were not produced by the Theatre Department. The frst was a product of Expermental College Productons and starred Ralph Cowngs, who also drected the Arthur Hanley drama. The total dedcaton to makng "Slow Dance" a professonal play was evdent n all facets of the work, but most notably n the almost unbelevable set. The second play was produced by the Black Theatre Ensemble and drected by Valerc Porter. As Mama Younger, Porter unted the entre cast nto a workng "famly." t's about tme a black company was really developed on ths campus, and the emergence of a totally successful producton should do much towards promotng ths effort. Theatre Department Progress The bg plus for the Theatre Department productons of ths year were ther nnovatons. The frst major producton of the year, "Castle of Persevere nee," was an attempt at a medeval moralty play. Although certan drawbacks of the orgnal play, whch ran for over sx hours and was very borng at tmes, were not roned out of the Theatre Department^ modem adaptaton, the producton was very successful on the whole. n hs observatons at the end of last year, Kape also called for the department of repertory theatre at Stony Brook. The Theatre Department made strong advances along these lnes also, wth the producton of a tro of studentdrected plays by Pnter. 'The Homecomng," 'The Collecton," and "The Dumbwater" were well executed and the repertory company seemed to work well as a unt. Unfortunately, there have been no further advances n ths drecton durng the year. Hopefully, ths trend towards repertory theatre wll be contnued. Another nnovaton of the Theatre Department ths year was the presentaton of a lunchtme theatre producton. "Hello Out There," a oneact play, was performed at noon n the Unon Audtorum. Although both the play tself and the producton were flawed, the dea of a noontme producton was met wth great approval and encouragement. And Muscals! One thng whch Kape called for whch was not followed, and feel wth good reason, was the producton of more muscals on campus. Durng the entre year, have ponted to a lack of competent actorsngers at Stony Brook. n each group there are many talented ndvduals. Ths, thnk, explans the many good straght drama productons, and also the success of the two operas whch were presented by the Theatre and Musc Departments at the end of last semester, 'The Marrage Contract," and "Abu Hassan." thnk ths also explans the falure of the major producton of ths semester, 'The Threepenny Opera." n the portons whch requred actng, the "Rasn n the Sun." drected by and starrng Valere Porter, was one of the best theatrcal productons of ths year. Record Revew Orchestra joned together Sundayrsng toward clmaxes only to subsde afternoon under the baton of Amybefore the expected peaks were Kaser n a spectacular performance ofre< ached. Notable n ths movement are Haydn's "Creaton" (De Schoepfung).th e orchestral attacks on off beats, an The oratoro, performed n Germann; stance of Haydn's genus n was sung wth great fervor by both thede pcton. The chorus enters quetly, solosts and the chorus. Kaser'sthen bursts nto forte on the word drecton was frstrate, elctng crsp"lght." responses from the chorus and able to The orchestra was qute good n pull the orchestra back nto lnedr amatc and evocatve passages but whenever t strayedno t so n lyrcal ones. n these, the Haydn was nspred to wrte hsve >lns faled to sustan the melodc oratoro after attendng performanceslne and were uncomfortably sour n of Handel's "Messah." He completednl/onaton. Yet the players were "The Creaton" n 798 after 8so metmes able to overcome these months of work, and conducted thefa frst performance hmself at court nph jts, makng one wsh they could ly that well consstently, rather than Venna. The text, orgnally n Englshn ht or mss fashon. For example, but translated nto German, s basedth< s "moonmusc" n No. (a on Geness and parts of Mlton'sre< ;tatve by the tenor solost) was "Paradse Lost."sh mmerng and on ptch, but by the Although t was certanly wrttentnne the bass sang hs rectatve n No. "des Schoepfers Lob" (to the prase of7, the volns were whnng agan. God), "The Creaton" s also a paean The solosts were exceptonal. to nature and to the creatve sprt.sc>pranos Karen Floyd, who sang the The progresson of the oratoro frompa rt of Gabrel, and Deborah Myers, chaos to the created world gves amplewl sang the part of Eve, are both opportunty for tonepantng, whchstjdents of A dele Addson and sang Haydn exploted wth obvous delght;wth some of the same artstry she orchestral musc llustrates the wordsdplays. Ther vocal technque was weather or storms, the sea, the dawnm< a nghtngale or a leapng tger. Thevn tched by ther great exuberance, a /acousness that made the technque portrayal of vast expanses sse<?m easy. Floyd's ascendng run on breathtakng; the vsta Haydn offers she r ara "Mt Staunen seht das mmense.w underwork" (No. 5) was Sense of Wondersp netnglng, perhaps because of the Fortunately the performersgr; dual crescendo whle the notes rose. conveyed the sense of wonder and physcal exaltaton so necessary to aso] vtal readng of the work. Thesa Frampton Plays Superb By ERC FRANKalthough nterestng, are smple and FR/ ^MPTON peter Frampton A&M SPappear qute meanngless at tmes. n 5 "Show Me The Way," Frampton E^ver snce Peter Frampton leftwrtes: Huble Pe nearly four years ago.well can see no reason Hunble Pe's musc has sufferedyou lvng on your nerves not ceably. Ther sound has becomewhen someone drops a cup and rep< ettous, domnated entrely bysubmerge Ste ve Marrott's gutsy vocals.'m swmmng n a crcle Frampton's gutar was an mportant fell 'm gong down. ngredent of the group and DaveFrampton uses these lyrcs to express Clemson never qute flled Framton'shs love for someone and declares that sho es.he can't beleve that ths "love" s lowever, Humble Pe's loss washappenng to hm. Fnally, he wants eve; rybody else's gan. Frampton on hsths person to show hm the way. The own has been able to branch out andlyrcs are sophomorc and detract from contnue to wrte and perform songsthe song. sm lar to those wrtten when he was a"one More Tme" and "The Cryng member of Humble Pe. "Shne On"Clown" arc more mellow than the frst andt "Earth and Water Song" from thetwo tracks and contan excellent gutar frst two Humble Pe albums, on A&Mby Frampton. t's these tasty gutar Re< 'ords, were standouts of Humblerffs that are Framp ton's trademark. Pe 's acoustc days. By the tmethe second sde starts off more Humbe Pe recorded Rockn' thestrongly than the frst wth a defntve Fllmore, Frampton and Marrott wererocker, "Nowhere's Too Far (For My "Threepenny Opera." the major producton of the Theatre Department ths goldg n dfferent muscal drectonsbaby)." Andy Bown s back agan to semester, faled due to the lack of competent actorsngers. and Frampton decded on a soloplay Fender bass and along wth John actors were fne; n the parts whch Stony Brook to put on twce as manycan?er.somos on percusson, they team up requred song, the vocalsts were fne; productons as ths year, and, as long S^ome performers aren't able to cutwth Frampton to play fne nspred n the parts whch requred both, as the trend towards professonaltyt wthout ther old bands and trock. There are two nstrumentals on however, everythng was a mess, contnues, then a push towards morebec omes panfully obvous that thersde two: "Nassau" and "Penny for unpolshed and straned. n quantty s also to be desredsk ls are lmted. However, FramptonYour Thoughts." Although they are Other productons of ths year As arts edtor, feel that then hs four solo albums, has been ableonly over a mnute each, they are well ncluded "Welcome to the poston can be used to nfluence andto grow and expand hs musc, whchthought out and not just fller space Monkeyhouse," produced and drected mprove, as well as record the qualtyw; EL s beng stfled durng hs later daysbetween songs. The album concludes of theatre at Stony Brook. n thswt by undergraduate Rch Rand, and h the Pe.wth another hard rocker, "( Gve *The Wzard of Oz," a Punch and poston, whch wll hold next year, Most of Frampton's songs deal wthyour) Money." Although lyrcally plan to contnue along the same lneslo *V Judy Folles play. Both were bascally e as the man theme and hs lyrcspoor, "Money" stll s a fne number successful. Concert Revew All n All n concluson, therefore, would Kaser Gves 'Creaton congratulate all those nvolved n theatre at Stony Brook for ther A Sense of Wonder generally fne showng ths year. urge the Theatre Department to contnue By JOHN DRURYov erture, enttled Representaton of to experment, to try more wth the The Unversty Chorus andcr aos, was approprately mysterous, deas of lunchtme and repertory theatre. Above all, would urge the Theatre Department to produce more straght, nonmuscal drama, especally a full three or fveact play (maybe even a Shakespeare) as ther major producton of a semester. For nontheatre Department productons: the Black Theater Ensemble should keep up ts good progresson; another producton by Rand and Company s eagerly awated; and more plays per semester should come out of Punch and Judy Folles. There are enough talented people at Thomas Bogdan, who s tenor lost wth the Gregg Smth Sngers, ng the part of Urel. He has a powerful voce whch he would do well to tone down n the name of balance durng ensemble passages. Although hs attacks on hgh notes tended to be overemphaszed and a bt sharp, hs sngng was mpressve, partcularly when he sang panssmo. Bass Roger Roloff was outstandng n the two roles he sang, Raphael and Adam. He even managed to suggest dfferent characters by hs sngng, the frst authortatve, the second free and joyous, the dfference perhaps between an angel and a man. Adams second duet wth Eve (No. ) was one of the hghlghts of the oratoro. The vocal rapport was extraordnary. n ths duet, Haydn was more than just generally nfluenced by Handel. Eve*s lne "Mt dr, mt dr, ml dr" sounds Rock Blend and fts n well wth Framp ton's other compostons. t s possble that f one doesn't pay attenton to Frampton's solo efforts, there mght be a tendency to dsmss hs musc as monotonous and obnoxous at frst. However, t takes a few lstenngs to any album to make a valuable judgment, and 'm sure that after a few earfuls of Frampton, Frampton's unque style wll surface, leavng the newcomer wth the pleasurable feelng of dscoverng a much underrated talent. Wnd of Chance (A&M 8), was a crtcally acclamed success and contaned notable artsts such as Rngo, Mke KeUe of Spooky Tooth, and Andy Brown, from Frampton's eary days wth The Herd. The mxture of acoustc and rock was superb and the sound was unquely Frampton's. Hs second and thrd albums Frampton's Camel and Somethng's Happenng were also receved well and contaned, "Whte Sugar," "Somethng's Happenng," and "When Fall n Love," by Steve Wonder. Wth hs fourth album, Frampton, Peter Frampton once agan contnues to provde a superb blend of acoustc and electrc rock. "Day's Dawnng" opens the album and although t's not perhaps the best song to open the LP, t s nevertheless a fne and competent rocker. Frampton's pano playng s perfect and complements hs gutar work ncely. exactly lke the begnnng of Handel's ara "Rejoce Greatly." The vocal dvsons by the solosts were nmble throughout but especally so on the fnal "Amen." The only problem wth the concluson was that the male voces n the chorus could not be heard well. Lawton Conducts "The Creaton" wll be performed agan Frday evenng at 8 p.m. n the Gym wth Davd Lawton conductng. f the performance s equal to Sunday's, lstenng to t wll be a joyous and movng experence. f rehearsals mprove 'the weak spots n the orchestral playng, as they should, t wll be a performance not to be mssed, and well worth hearng a second tme. Pter Frampton's rfwst album, "Fnmpton." contws tote trwd of mscatty excellent and lyrcally smple recordngs. T/e Psychc Express9: Student Vdeo Theatre *'What's so absurd about a tran that never stops, or people that dsappear nto thn ar because there aren't any other cas?" Ths s the engma whch both the man character and the vewng audence of "A Psychc Express" wfll be faced wth. "A Psychc Express/ 9 an orgnal vdeoplay whch represents the frst effort of ts knd at Stony Brook, deals wth a cosmopoltan commuter's encounters wth sewal outoftheordnary passengers on a tran whch never seems to reach ts destnaton. The play, whch may be labelled an absurd comedy and a takeoff on Rod Sortng's '"Twl^t Zone," centers around a conservatve bank teller (Paul Over). n the course of hs rde home, he creates n hs mnd a vared group of characters who symbolze hs own nablty to cope wth realty. The comc stuatons whch follow range from the young busnessman (Davd Schwartz) to the absurd conductor (Joe Broadus) who s busy sellng the tonght n tne Rany Nght coffee house n the Unon. tran to an elderly tody. Through awl that txanspres n the frst act, the man has tte ante companonshp of a yow^ gb Batty, portrayed by Shaua Smon. The meter of the second act swtches wth the ntroducton of a young man (Mke Cheffo) who chauen«n the man character's fantases. Realzng that he cannot accept what teas happened to tea, ftbe cooumter leaps from the **A ftflrchse Bxpass" pments ttr *fcpcts of^ some 6 volu&toer ^A< SB faculty membera. Wocte^wtth f» powertu scrpt aod dtecuott of Strren Frtedman and the tecmreal llmce of Lou Manna, the mult s emly paced movement and a ncely balanced plot "A Psychc Express" wffl be premerng tonght n the Rany Nght House n the Unon. f you axe not dong anythng tonght at 9,, or p.m., drop by for a vsual journey nto another dmenson on express. the psychc play wll be premfd Page STATESMANMay May 7, 975 STATESMAN Page

13 r Book Revew Sumner Lockets Goma By ALAN TRONER No one has been able to wrte a belevable future snce George Orwell's 98. That was almost years ago. To go beyond the specalzed genre of scence fcton and wrte a true _ a, Utopan entry has seemed to be mpossble. Maybe the future s too frghte, or maybe t overtaes the present too quckly. Every tme the book notces come n, read about the world beng overcome by unfoseen dsaster such as the mulaton of some ntellgent form of atlt's foot; or stores n whch the nevtable ntellgent mechancal lfe s ma, and everyone wnds up dong poor mtatons of Woody Allen's Sepr.ve taken t pa to my kon of Aldous Huxley n hope of fndng anothernegatve utopa. S' d Soap Open Unfortunately, Sumner Locke's Gong sn't t. Gong s scence fcton soap opera, equally composed of 5 cent comcs, the common novel, and a Seral meage whch could only be called "One more day on the edge of nght the stomach turns." The comparsons to soap opera are too numerous to be laughed at. They nclude such standard fare as the old lover returned, the thankless sonnlaw, and a wse, aged Mary Worth fgure who rescues the stuaton from despar wth a clche and a glass of mlk. The plot revolves around the last day of an old woman, Tess, who n some futurstc settng, s gong to be put to sleep. n ths socety people are "retred" from lfe at a set age. Trough nternal monologue, the lfe and tmes of Tess Bracken are recounted. Ths ncludes long pages descrbng her frst trp to Europe, her frst love, the deaths of "Daddy" (worth at least three Kleenex) and other sentmental journeys. By the end of her las day, Tea has recovered enough wll to reject her old lover's ntended rescue and go Dckensan, to her death. Tess Bracken s a pretentous snob wthout any compensatng refnement She s the knd of person whose day would be mned by someone's usng the wrong type of wne glass. The feelng throughout the novel s that Tess s a type, rather than a chaacter. She represents all that s good n the patrcan outlook, the consderaton that qualty s better than quantty. The problem s that t just doesn't come off. She may talk of Sherry and Cnzano and Mahler at the Met, but Tess, lke her two spoled daughters, ends up worse than unconvncng. She s rdculous. Typecast Roles To say that the cast of characters les exclusvely n the recallng of her lfe would be an njustce to the novel. Joan, daughter number one, s es Book Revew Medcal Hstory Scanned n 'Medcne and Man' Should Be Gongs Gong Gone synthess of all the poorlttlerchkd roles snce Shrley Temple. The second daugher, Barbara, s a "hppe," a ploy whch appears to be an attempt at relevancy. The husband s a noble Roman patrcan, wse enough to foresee all, but not ruthless or 'common" enough to prevent t. Henry Platt, the vllanous sonnaw s the ultmate Ron Zegler. He s loyal, colorless and ngratatng; yet s supposed to haunt the novel wth a sense of forebodng, of perlous doom. But Harry s a poor Uago; rather he s the perfect government bureaucrat. Engagng n a dalogue wth Tess, he tres to prove that annhlaton s for her own good. Even here Orwell has preceded Locke and provdes a model for hm to copy. The orgnal was better. Most engagng of all s the old lover, Hamlet, Ham for short He s too good to be true. A 6'" blonde, he enters the novel lke an extra from a Swedsh ' art flm. Bult lke the man n the Marlboro commercal, he does the noble thng and attempts to rescue Tess n the end. How could he do anythng else? Gong attempts to defend "oblge noblesse." Locke awkwardly constructs a condemnaton of Coarseness, completely forgettng that to defend the moned noblty he must show some noblty. None of these characters do ths. The problem wth Gong s not only the falure to prove a pont. t s also attempts to mx too many styles and genres at once, often to the reader's dsmay. Ths gumbo of conflctng genres has somethng for everyone but satsfes no one. n usng one of the most basc of the modem novelst's tools, the flashback, Locke fals dsmally, leavng the reader wth 6 pages of worthless, polychromatc crap. 've seen hs future and t doesn't work. Ress Exhbts Photos n nformnal Gallery By P. LAWRENCE CASE cass of overpopulaton or f the MEDCNE AND MAN by Nod Poynter, uln, $.5 woman was over years old. One of the most fundamental truths ndeed, n a manuscrpt generally that we humans are fced wth s that regarded a authentc, Hppocrates of our own mortalty. As good as the hmself descrbes how he gave an engeeag of the human body s, t aborton to a woman. Poynter susts stll faces perodc falures throughout that a possble explanaton s that a lfelong sduggle to exst, and then a physcans promsed not to ad n fnal teonato at death. abortons, not because abortons were t s not surprsng, then, that mmoral, but rather because they were almost all human socetes, throughout supposed to be performed by female now on dsplay n the nformal Gallery, Old Chemstry 8. Wcrded hstory, hwe had an mmense m ldws, who had much more The new nformal Gallery of the State Unversty system. He has also ntert n some knd of medne. n exertse n such matten than dd the Center for Contnung Educaton expanded to sx the number of Vrtually an of these cultures, the male phydca has opened and features a showng photography courses, the demand socety at large, and the medcal There wa also a belef, whch of photos by Unversty lecturer for whch has never been hgher. prttkners wthn, have had an survved as late as Eg laws of the Davd Ress. The exhbt s Students Frst Prorty pat nfuee on eah other. 6th century, that male fetuses dd composed manly of nudes (see Some of the reasons for the Too often, then nteractons have not become fully "anmate" untl the photo) but also ncludes portrats ncreasng nterest n photography, gone lpgly unnotced and unalyze. th day of pregnancy, and the female and other forms The show accordng to Ress, le n hs n e and Man, Noel Poynter fetus untl the 8th day. Ths contnues through Frday, May 9, approach to teachng. "My students dssses the ntermngled evoluton of dstncton between unformed and n the Old Chemstry Buldng, are always my frst prorty,'" says modem socety and modern medcne, formed fetuses would seem to bear room 8, from noon through Ress. He explans that, through dealng wth ssues of cultural hstory, some resemblance to the aborton p.m. forcng hs students to really thnk relgon, ethcs, phlosophy, medcal decson of the Unted States Supreme n addton to creatng the actual before clckng the shutter, he has educaton, poltcs, and economcs. Court, whch ruled that abortons are show, hs thrd (frst at Stony been able to gve them a new Many of hs dsusons touch on permsable f done before an arbtrary Brook), Ress has provded Stony perspectve. " supply the spark, topcs of current mportnce. week n the perod of pregnancy. Brook wth the potental for real and they're now on fre," says For example, Poynter gves a t s ssues lke these that Poynter advancement and nnovaton n Ress, who adds that hs students snatng hstory of the ssue of ably dscusses n hs text The author photography. n the four years at have done remarkably well; one aborton as developed n Greek and has a lfelong background n medcal Stony Brook, Ress has almost even has her own show. Roman tmes and n the mewval` era. hstory, and ths, hs fst work amed snglehandedly made photography a Another of Ress' recent Why, be asks, does the Hppocratc at a general audence, s well presented vable force here. Durng ths year, accomplshments at Stony Brook Oath, of ek orgn and stll taken and organzed, wth a dear style that he has desgned and set up a was the organzaton of last by physcans today, contan the makes for enjoyable as well as darkroom, studo, and gpllery weekend's photography conference. words " wfll not gve to a woman an nstructve readng. The book should complex n the Old Chemstry The conference featured as ts man abortve. wn"edy" when, n realty, be of great help to people who want a Buldng. When ths complex s attracton W. Eugene Smth, one of abort s w eon mon n Greece and broad hstorcal perspectve on scence complete, t wll be one of the the fnest photojournalsts n the Roe? n fact, t was suggested by and socety, as well as new vews of largest, most functonal unts n the wordd. Plao that aborton be mandtoly n contemponay problemsn L fo r/ M o h^l.! Page STATESMAN May

14 Wed, May 7 CAREER DSCUSSON: Group dscussons for graduatng students are held all day today and tomorrow at p.m. n Admnstraton 5. BAHA': The Baha' communty at Stony Brook cordally nvtes the Unversty communty to attend an nformal dscusson n SBU 9 at 8 p.m. JEWSH MEDTATON: Anyone nterested n learnng Jewsh medtaton should meet at p.m. n SBU 9. EXHBTS: Mary Jane Fsher's works wll be on dsplay n Lbrary Exhbt Room through May 9 from a.m. All entres n ENACT's EcoArt Contest wll be on dsplay n the SBU Gallery from a.m. to 5 p.m. through May 9. THEATER: "An Evenng of Mme" wll be presented at 8 p.m. n the Calderone Theater (South Campus B). Admsson s free. POTTERY CLUB: A specal meetng of the Pottery Club s beng called to dscuss next year's budget and actvtes at p.m. n the SBU Arts and Crafts Center. FLM: "A Dfferent Path" wll be shown n SBU at :5 p.m. COMMTTEE OF THE HANDCAPPED: The Commttee meets to dscuss the approval of the confdentalty proposal and the Aprl meetng wth Unversty Presdent John Toll n Socal Scence B8 at :5 p.m. KBBUTZ CARAVAN: Representatves of the Kbbutz Alyah Department wll be at a table n the SBU lobby through May 9 from a.m. to p.m. nformaton and lterature regardng kbbutz lvng wll be avalable. DAY CARE: Benedct Day Care Center s now acceptng applcatons from students wshng to work durng ether the summer or fall semesters. Applcatons are avalable between a.m. and 5 p.m. ACADEMC ADVSNG: The Expermental College s tryng a new approach. f you are nterested n studyng a subject of your nterest n an ntensve way, call Tom MogerWllams at 68 or Tom Dargan at 68. SELFHELP WORKSHOP: Any woman who would lke to ether form an ongong selfhelp group or go through an ntroductory sesson should contact Gene at 75 or Stephane at MASS: Catholc Mass s held every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Frday at :5 p.m. n SBU 9; Wednesday at 7 p.m. n Roth Cafetera followed by a lght buffet; and Sunday at a.m. n Roth Cafetera. DALY PRAYER: The Fellowshp meets every weekday n SSA 67 at noon. RVNG DSCO: Every Wednesday evenng begnnng at 8 p.m., rvng Dsco wll feature quad musc and a happy hour wth 5 cents off all mxed drnks. COLLOQUUM: Dr. H. Lowensten of Syracuse Unversty wll dscuss "Physcs of Toys" at : p.m. n Physcs 7. ENACT: A general membershp meetng wll be held at 7: p.m. n SBU 8. TENNS: The team wll compete aganst Baruch College n a Metropoltan Tenns Conference meet at p.m. on the tenns courts. PERFORMANCE: The New Structure Ensemble wll perform at 8: p.m. n Lecture Center 5. NOTCES: Begnnng September, 975, student transcrpts wll cost $. A professonal nstructor from a natonally certfed dvng organzaton wll provde a free three hour lesson n Scuba Dvng. For further nformaton contact Bob DBona at The Alumn Assocaton's sprng trp to Japan has scheduled an addtonal flght date, May 8, departng for Tokyo from JFK. The cost of the trp, ncludng round trp jet fare, transfers, eght days and seven nghts at Sheraton's Otan Hotel n Tokyo, breakfast daly, a sghtseeng tour of Tokyo, theatre tckets, and gude servce throughout the trp, s $99 per person plus 5 percent tax and servce. Alumn, faculty, staff and students who have completed more than half ther degree requrements nterested n ths second departure should contact Lenore Nogewch at 658 mmedlately. ^ Calendar of Events N. * Students who are plannng to relnqush ther used books at the end of the term to the Bookstore for a pttance of rembursement should be aware that the People's Book Cooperatve wll soon begn operaton. Save your books untl mdsummer or September at whch tme you wll be able to exchange them for other books or trade them n for a far prce. For more nformaton or to volunteer assstance contact Chrs or Arwen at 6776 or Joe at 655. PHOTO EXHBT: Photographs by Prof. Hugh Cleland are on dsplay through May 9 n the Admnstraton Frst Floor Gallery Monday through Frday from 8: a.m. to 5 p.m. UNTED FARM WORKERS: UFW meets at 7: p.m. n Socal Scence A featurng guest speaker, Fred Ross, natonal drector of the UFW's boycott of grapes, lettuce, and Gallo wnes, dscussng the farmworkers' cause and hs organzer's tranng program. NFORMAL TALK: Psychology for the People s sponsorng Peter Franks, graduate student n Socal Psychology, dscussng Poltcs, Hstory, and Socal Psychology at p.m. n Socal Scence B5. SPEAKER: Moshe Tabankn, srael poet and ducator, wll dscuss "Transformatons of Prsonlty n. Modem srael Lterature" at 7: pjn. after the Hllel Frday nght dnner n Roth Cafetera. AN are weaom. For nformaton or reservatons for the dnner contact Dannv at or Rch at BCYCLE TOUR: All undergraduates wth fte or ton speed bkes and permsson of Coach Ramsey can jon the tour, whch wll vst North Fork, Long land and stay overnght at a youth hostel n Matttuck.d The tour loaves from the Gym Pato at pmn. and returns tomorrow around 6 pm. Brng $5 for mealsk, hoae, and personal expenses. CONCERT: The Unvhersty Chorus, the Unrsty Orchestra, and guest solosts wll perform the Creon, Haydn's oratoro, n ts entrety begnn at 8 pjn. n the Gym. Sat, May SERVCES: Shabbat servces ae hol for the Orthodox n Hllel House and for the nonorthodox n Roth Cafetera at : am. FLM: A German flm. wth Englsh subttles, FLM: Saturday Flm Swes p r o t n a r. "Buddenbrooks," wll be shown at noon n SBU. Callpgr" and "The Lady From ShnghM at noo" n SBU Audtorum. SEMNARS: The Marne Scences Research Center s pleased to announce a seres of semnars on thew "Dstrbuton and Transportaton of Suspended Sedment n Coastal Waters," from a.m. to 5 p.m. n Bology. Thu, May 8 ENACT RECYCLNG: The commttee wll meet to dscuss and plan recyclng projects at : p.m. n SBU ENACT/PRG Offce. SRAEL DANCNG: srael dancng wll be held n SBU lounge at 8 p.m. Begnners welcome. SPEAKER: Unversty Presdent John Toll wll be the featured speaker at the Lbrary Forum from noon to p.m. n the Lbrary conference room. SOFTBALL: The team wll compete aganst Patterson State at p.m. on the athletc feld. RECTAL: Lynn Margoles wll perform a Master of Musc rectal on the strng bass at 8: p.m. n Lecture Center 5. SEMNAR: Dr. Alfred Maelcke of Rockefeller Unversty wll speak on "The Acetylcholne Receptor: Response to Drug Bondng" at : p.m. n Chemstry 6. SATSANG: An nformal dscusson on the medtaton as taught by Guru Maharaj J wll take place at 8 p.m. n SBU 6. ESS SOCETY: The socety meets featurng John Yocasta who wll fly you to the moon as well as a dscusson of last mnute plans for the party at :5 p.m. n ESS 5. Brng donatons. FLM: Sr Chnmoy s sponsorng the screenng of "Awakenng" at 8 p.m. followed by a medtaton class and a dscple dscussng the yogc path of Sr Chnmoy n SBU 6. CHRSTAN FELLOWSHP: The Fellowshp meets to share study the Bble, and sng at 8 p.m. n SBU. ESS STUDENTS: ESS graduate and undergraduate students are urged to vote for the professors of your choce to determne Mr. ESS. Forms should be pcked up n the ESS Lbrary or Man Offce and returned to the tolet bowl n front of the ESS Man Offce by today. Fr, May 9 COMMUTER ELECTON RUNOFF: A runoff electon between Al Shubert and Marlyn Ramrez for Commuter College Treasurer wll be held all day n Gray College Basement. COLLOQUUM: Dr. M. Kent Wlson, head of the Natonal.Scence Foundaton Offce of Plannng, Coordnaton, and Evaluaton, wll speak about '"The Support of Basc Research by NSF" at : p.m. n Chemstry 6. ESS PARTY: Wnners of the Mr. ESS compettobn wll be announced at ths endoftheyear cbraton at p.m. on the ESS plaza. COMMUTER PROGRAMMNG COMMTTEE: An commuters nterested n plannng next semester's Pro.grams should net.t pm. n Gray Colgw Basmnt BASEBALL: The Patrots battle Sacred Hrt at oon on the athletkc feld. TENNS: The tenns team faces _w~chlreom fro at p.m. on the tenns court CCNY RECTAL: A chamunber musc rectal wll be pwfonrmd at 8: p.m. n Lecture Center 6. Dor Sppel wll present a Master of Musc ctdbl on the vola at p.m. n Lecture C _ne 5. TRACK: The track team travels to Kkg Poh compete aganst Kngs Pont and Hofstra at ajn. Sun, May RECTAL: A Mastwer of Musc rectal on the voln wm be pwformed by lan Wnt at 8: pjn. n Lectue Center 5. Mon, Maj SUMMER DANCE WORKSHOPS: The Summer Sesson Actvtes Board wll offer three Dance Wrkshops durng the summer: Basc Ballet for Adults. Moden Dance Exercse, and Basc Ballet for Chldren. Clab wll be held n the Dance Studo of the Gym on Tuesdays and Thursdays begnnng May and ndng June 6. Regster from am. to pnm. tody and tomorrow n SBU 66. Late rgsbraton wll be on May 9 n Admnstraton. For omlte normatn call 677. RECTAL: Peter Cerulo wll prform hs Maser of Musc rectal at 8: p.m. n Lecture CMter 6. ART EXHBTON: Carol DePqual w open an art exhbton May n the nformalr Gallery, Old Chemstry Buldng, from 5 pm to 7 pm. The exhbt wll be hed through May 7 and wh be open Tuesday through Saturday from am. to 5 pnm. Tue, May FLM: Tuesday Flcks wll show a move at 8 pm. n SBU Audtorum. Call 677 for fn tte. RECTALS: For hs Master of Musc rectal, Dad "yyor wll perform on the trumpet at 8: pm n Lecture Center 5. Wed, May RECTAL: Bruce Erskne, flautst, w be l asssd by other artsts at 8: pm. n Lecture Center 5. COLLOQU UM: Mel Albn, Ph.D. canddate, wl dscus "Socal Change and the Amercan Famly" at pm. n Lbrary, thrd floor, w roamern Confeenc Room. Thu, May 5 RECTAL: Phylls Gotb wll g a Mstr oa Md c rectal on pano at 8: pmn. n LeurbeCenter G LUCK AND EOY YOU _t rs HERETHE CALEAR STrFF Coordfhuor. ; B a Ace Arw 9k fy ToTowrop Ad to May 7, 975 STATESMAN PW 5

15 NARDY SPOTSCR CETE 559 AST JERCHO TURNPKE SMTHTOWN, N.Y. SALES 7 SERVCE 75 Std. Fact. up M L'r. $95 MARNA75 ' HONDA CVC lalllsu ~~~~~~~AUSTN 9;.BRANDNEWl.'» * l. $*» V H. Ur. &Std. Fact. Equpt. $9 5ARNA F d Q _ m *6 = '' a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ F Tarcrv nar~~7dv TnryH SMTHTOWNY SMTHTOWN SMT H r ~~~~~~~~~ ALWAYS A SELECTON OF MPORTED USED CARS _r, q ftyng At Your FvorAt UNTED ARTSTS THEATRES.O. CARDS REQURED WMER APPLCABLE "THE SEDUCTON together wofmm" '"GONG PLACES" pther wth ^97 ROUTE 5AA9 tb = VLLayfc SETAUKET TG OHE LONGEST YARD" TOGETHER WTH By_"ow for JULY TESTS LAW BOARDS "M "URDER = NW ON THE 5_ h S QNY ORENT EXPRESS" amb Kdde Matnee Saturday & Sunday at:( "PUFF & STUFF" WBCHAELPAPAROPRlUMYPRESENTS THE PREMER OF THE GMLOMMCENTER MAY9& SENTN THERONLYN.Y.AREAAPPEARA CJLtS radltw ffesmbwm^ SPECALGUEST VLOVfbO XAMM,MNOMPM T KC ON SALC NOW M AVAALE AT BOK O CE CALL 5() 5M AND AT ALL TK. )5 >EORsO)S77 TCKETS ALSO AT lecordo WOL M5EVELT FELD. XBROOK. CEMNTEACH ^MD BAYSHORE LOOMM MRUK D MC CamC BY: CaWrMOtC AM EDEM'S APPLE CONCERT PRESEKTATO COMNGBLUE OYSTER CUL SATURDAY, MAY 78PM KETS: $6.5,5.5 ON SALE AP Hy 766f ~~~~~Route 9^y^ /WCW^ ~% Mle South of Fomel Cnema Nesconset Hwy. X Formerly Cnema Arcade Shoppng Center Port Jefferson M MONTY PYTHON'S l "And Now For Somethng Completely Dfferent" N. together Roman Polansk's "REPULSON wth E Weekdays & Sat. "And Now... Dfferent" at 7 & : A "REPULSON" at 8:5 S Sunday "REPULSON" at :, 5:5 & 8: T '"And Now... Dfferent" at :5. 7: & : M N MDNGHT 5/9 & 5/ Fr. & Sat. _"CONCERT FOR BANGALADESH" '"THE FOUR MUSKETEERS" t(,gether wth s " HARROW HOUSE" T L Page 6 STATESMAN May

16 PERSONAL NANCY S. You were my unattanable dream. would have lked to get nto a relatonshp wth you, but you were so beautful that was afrad. So afrad that was scared to ask you out. Have a great summer. Alan. WANTED: LADES RDNG JACKET Msses sze 8 or. Call Maron 6 days. LEBER LMWE, You make me so very happy. Wuv and a huggypoo, Delne Lowln. My thanks to MORT and JDS for tranng me. to the Producton Staff for beng so patent, and the sports staff for your hard work. Have a great summer. Stu. Wll whoever called about my lost vest please call back? 6655thanks. GOODBYE STONY BROOK. 've learned lttle but grown much. Try to get along wthout me. JKG. LARRY lookng back on ths year, 'm glad that you were around to share the tryng tmes of college lfe wth me. Despte our dfferences consder you to be a great human beng and a frend well worth havng. Best of everythng! Bruce. DEAR CAP, tred to make the end of 6 good. hope can make all of 7 great. Happy Brfday old man. Love, GRL. DEAR FRANK What would have done wthout my couch, our rdes to the prnter, breakfasts, and your help wth the delveres, not to menton all our love. 'll mss t all. Please mss me. Remember Foster Avenue sn't really that far away. Enjoy yourself, honestly. Love, Runt. TO THE : UNON CROWD what dd you get for down? Good luck on all future puzzles. TERRY So 'll see you on campus next semester? JB. SHADOW AND PATCHES, thanks for makng ths year the best! 'll mss you. Best of luck! Love always, Bones. D.P.How shy are you? Happy Brthday Baby Pussycat. W.L.A. Dear F.M. You're the fartest. Keep up your good work n gvng t out for free to anyone (male, female, anmal, vegetable, mneral, lvng or dead). Love and ksses. C.R. DEAR DONALD, t's gong to be a long, lonely summer n Boston wthout you. Trust me, 'll be good. Enjoy Colorado but stay away from those blondesthey're bad for you. Just thnk, t wll make our September reunon so much more joyful. love you Monkey Face. ROOMMATES WANTED FOR ROOM SWTCH f you and your roommate lve on a second or thrd floor female hall n Benedct or Langmur and would lke to move nto beautful Kelly B, contact Marca 699. MARCA Just to tell you love you and 'll mss you lke crazy ths summer. Steve. STEVE: "You are my sun, my moon, and all my stars." Three months s a long tme but you know 'll be wth you even then. Marca. DEAR STEVE Now here's your apology. Thanks for makng everythng worthwhle. Love you always Your Nut. RDE NEEDED TO FLORDA leave around May, share drvng and expenses. Call Glenn 676. RTER D. t's been fun. The puzzles n the unon and all. Go to rot. O.P. DR. NEL the worst s over 'm sure you dd great! Harvard and Yale wll have to fght over you now! Love, Sue. HELPWANTED ADMNSTRATVE ASST Nonproft cultural organzaton n Smthtown area seeks brght, dynamc wellorganzed extrovert for exctng fulltme job. Selfntated offce, heavy phone work lason wth publc and board of drectors. Good typng and ncdental bookkeepng sklls necessary. Send complete resume ncludng salary requrements to Box 65, Stony Brook, NY 79. FOR SALE LAST OFFER GADO TENNS JACKETS. End of semester c e a r ancespecal prce. Only medum red and blue left. Call between 5 and 7 p.m. ask for Pete before t's too late, 6. TR6 97. dark blue, 6, mles, Mchelns, snows, Carello fogs, AMFM stereo tape Kons, luggage rack, reasonable, V.G.C. Contact Mra FOR SALE; year old REFRGERATOR,.5 cubc feet, perfect condton, for one person or an offce, FAT SPYDER CONV. red, 5 speed, excellent body and mechancal, Mchelns, AMFM, great gas mleage, beautful $. 88 days, 75 evenngs. BRAND NEW! Ladles BUXTON WALLETS, fantastc reducton n prce. Great gfts. Mothers' Day s May. Call Nan 65. BOOK SALE: / off Lst Prce Economcs L Poltcal Scence Ttles All other used paperbacks / prce THE GOOD TMES 5 East Man St. Port Jefferson Open Mon.Sat MAGS & TRES. lug Mustang w/locks. Call after 6 p.m. DAMOND ENGAGEMENT RNGS. Buy drect from manufacturer and SAVE: / ct. $99; / ct. $95; ct. $595. For catalog send $ to SMA damond mporters, Box 6, Fanwood, N.J. 7 (ndcate name of school). Or to see rngs call 689 for locaton of showroom nearest you. STEREO: Lafayette 5 TA recever and BSR turntable, excellent condton, must sell, call Dave 65. VOLKSWAGEN BUS, completely rebult, must sell mmedately, unusual sacrfce, quck deal. Mke. Gershwn BB Hgh fashoned, hand embrodered. BEAUTFUL TOPS mported from nda at low, low prces, 675, Toscann, Tabler, weekdays 9 p.m. 96 FORD GALAXE 5, automatc, power steerng. new tres. CHEAP, call Glda at FAT SPYDER, 5 speed, excellent body and mechancal. New: convertble top, radals and snows., AM/FM. low mles. Bob C. 686 or 8. AUSTN HEALY 965,, MK, black, overdrve, great mechancally good body, $95. Must sell, REFRGERATOR KNG Used Refrgerators and Freezers bought and sold, delvered on campus, call 9899 anytme. DUAL AUTOMATC TURNTABLE, Model 6, excellent condton, lke new wth Shure M9ED cart. base & dust cover. Call after p.m Best offer wll be accepted. MUST SELL Sanyo DCA7X channel decoder, channel prepower amplfer, Htach stereo cassette deck TRQ6 and spea k e rs. Askng $. Call Marc 757 or 658. TYPEWRTER FOR SALE, Underwood, semportable, new condton HOUSNG FACULTY MEMBER OR GRAD STUDENT share nce 7 room HOUSE wth male faculty member. One mle from Unversty, wooded area, freplace, modern ktchen. Must be neat and quet. S5/month begnnng n late August or September (May store belongngs over summer). Call SNGLES WANTED Enjoy ths summer wth coed grour. Nce beach house. Walk to everythng. About hour from Manhattan.. snales come here every weekend or 779. GRADUATE WOMAN, vegetaran nonsmoker would lke to SHARE HOUSE/APARTMENT wth others who are the same for September 75 andon. Please wrte Marsha Lasker, 96 Layton Avenue, Buffalo, New York or call collect, late at nght, untl May 7. SERVCES DON'T READ THS AD unless you have a car to sell! Call Mke GUTAR NSTRUCTON: chldren or adults. Musc fundamentals, basc chord theory, fngerpckng. more. $.5 per lesson. Call 7555 for addtonal nformaton. Local and long dstance MOVNG & STORAGE, cratng, packng, FREE estmates, call COUNTY MOVERS, 9899 anytme. TYPEWRTER REPARS, cleanng fast servce, FREE estmates. TYPECRAFT, 5 Man, Port Jefferson Staton (rear Prolos Bldg.) 77. Motorcycle and Auto nsurance. fre and theft avalable, any drver. EWE WLL NOT BE UNDERSOLD." All Servce, Broadway, Rocky Pont, N.Y., 8. RUTOCO MOTOR CORPORATON now extends to Stony Brook students an endofsemester movng offer!!! Rutoco wll move the entre contents of your dorm room anywhere. Specal rates to N.Y.C. and vcnty. Call for free nperson estmate. You ' be amazed FOREGN MFDCAL SCHOOL OPENNGS avalable for Fall 75. NTERMED can place you nto European medcal schools, costs much less than Mexco and educaton s superor. Specal programs are avalable for students wth C averages. Call NTERMED, 68,99 or wrte 6 Park Avenue South, N.Y., N.Y. TYPNG term papers, resumes, etc. Accurate, fast, relable, reasonable. Call ELECTROLYSS/RUTH FRANKEL Certfed FelloW ESA, recommended by physcans, modern methods, 'consultatons nvted walkng dstance to campus, 75^86. Forever Changng Halrcutters wll WASH, CUT, BLOW DRY wth Student.D. $5.. No appontment necsry, Mon.St. 6 ; T h u r s REFRGERATOR KNG wll be pckng up Refrgerators on campus thru the summer. Cash pad on pck up. Call 9899 for appontment. NEED A BABYSTTER? evenngs or days, weekends or weekdays. Qoll qualfed, have references. Call JU587. LO V E Y O V EY HOUSE PREKNDERGARTEN ( and "r olds) open 8:5:5. N.Y.S. Early Chldhood permanently lcensed head teacher, experenced and dedcated staff. Reasonable tuton. Fee ncludes al materals and snack. Possblty to adjust attendance tme when necessary. ntervlew by appontment. Contact Mrs. Rausch LOST & FOUND LOST DOG POODLE, black, grey and whte, answers to GG. Cart 667, 666. REWARD. LOST: Whte Husky, answers to Lux, 6 months old. f found call Regge at 699. GENEROUS REWARD. LOST: dog, Poodle black, whte, answers to Glal. Call 667 or 666. REWARD. LOST: a Harpur College notebook wth Anthro notes nsde on Aprl. Please call Steve 6575 f found. LOST: Thurs., May, par slver wre rmmed glasses between Gym and Unon and Lbrary. One loaf home made bread as REWARD. Call 68 or send to Box KB8A. LOST: one par of dearly needed glasses (wreframed) maroon case, by Lght Engneerng or Gym. Call Joyce 687. MSSNG: from HeadoftheHarbor/ Stony Brook area snce Aprl 5 possbly seen on SUNY campus male dogs. black and bege male German Shepard "SAMM wearng leather collar; tan large male Retrever cross "TEDDY" warng leather collar. These two dogs are companons and owned by the same man. There s a REWARD. Owner heartbroken. Reports have been receved that they were seen on SUNY campus on A p r eas l. Pl e call WHOEVER TOOK 8 reeltoreel tapes from a green Dodge Polara parked!n back of green house by Old Blo Bdg. these are mportant study materals for me. would greatly apprecate the return of these tapes. Please return to Drk 6 or Dr. A. Krant 656. LOST: blackgray Toy Poodle,GG" last seen n Stony Brook area. f found call 667 or NOTCES Commuters nterested n programmng events for next semester pleace contact John Folclk at On Frday, May 9 there wll be a programmng meetng at o.m. M. _ A s s e m b y m a n George ochbrueckner's campus lason offce s now open every Tues. Thurs. and Fr. from a.m. to p.m. We are located n the Lbrary room C65. We wll try to solve al problems. Call Arthur at 6 for detals. There wll be a runoff ectlon fnor Commuter Co Tresurer on Frday. May. Runnng for ofnc be swnl nu t Ramre and Al Shubet. There w» be a metn ot a commuters at the Commuter College, n the b met of Cole Dscusson w nclude Com r party. summer actvtes and programmng and more. AM commuters pm attend. f: May 9. ~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Summer Sesson Actvtes Board announces three Dance workshops wll be offered durng tn summer sesson: Basc Ballet for Adults Basc Ballet for Chldren 66 and Modern Dance Exerche. All ct_ wlu be hod n the Dance Studo of the Gym on a Tues./Thurs. schedule. R9gstraton wll be on Mon., a Tues. May, room 6M SBWU btw'en. Lat Rgsraton Mon. May 9. Admn. Bldg. For fe and couse oratokn call 677. Roth ChldrensCenter s now acceptng applcatons fo s r NT ( 8 (6 credts) course. CO" or come down to Roth Quad Cafetera lt floor. On May 9 Or. M. Kent Wllson, the he»d of NSFs Offce of Plannnr. Coordnaton and Evaluaton va delhr a colloquum Weted ""The Suort o Basc Research by NSF" at : p.m. n the Old Chemstry Lecture Hall C 6. Spond Jontly by the Offce of R Admnstraton andt Chamv Department. An students ntersd n summer sesson credt for Day Cam Work NW Semnar, NT 88 contact Davd Lchtensten at 655, 75. Harkne East s gong to be a studentrun cooperatve cafetera n Stage X Qued. maal $5.8; S mnw $.; dnnes only, $.. f you want to be * part of ths communty ktchen pl contact us before th end of f to s Peter 6689; Dave 6; abble 67. Green Gallera Sale A plant sale wll be hold n the Lbrary Gallerla on Thurs.. May 8 to buy new plants for the Gallerla. The sale wll feature lve plants, baked goods and '9whte elephants" ncludng paperback books. Every tem wll tw prced reasonaby and the sale wll be hold from 9::. All non medcal students must clean out lockers on or before May 9, 975. The Brdge to Somewhere wll be closed durng fnals week. However, we wll be open durng summer sessons. Keep a look out for our summer hours. Rght now our hours are Mon.Frl. (*xcept Tues.) a.m. p.m. and 8 p.m,l a.m.; Sat. 8 p.m.l am.; Sun. 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. a.m., Unon room 8. The Department of Germanc and Slavc Languages s offerng for the frst tme through the two summer sessons RUSSAN (frst sesson) and RUSSAN (second sesson). Both clans wll meet M W F from : to :5 p.m. nstructor: Mr. Bertz. For further nformaton contact the Department, 6O/. ATTENTON MAY 975 GRADUATES ELGBLE FOR PROVSONAL TEACHER CERTFCATON: Applcatons am avalable n the Offce of Taacher Certfcaton. Humantes 9. Volunteer tutors needed for Remedal educaton at the Suffolk County Chldren's Shelter. Must be able to work through the summer. f nterested please call VTAL 668 or stop by room 8, SBU. May STATESMAN Page 7

17 **A%. ** Male Athlete of the Year: Female Atthllc (>f l'h«y."'«^:; ; ** ^" '*. * '*.': ~ ^ ;. a, '' j. ' > ^ l^* ss 6'A ^. : :.'5; ws '.. M n:; :; Earl Keth Wold you beleve that 6.5 perhaps the record could have t bftsketbl alter, who wa& the 5th been the reasson for lack of fan leadngscore r Dlvon m of the support, he quckly z refuted that ; N.CLA.A., led tw Kackerbocker dea: % q<few SW» a»cord settng My hgh schoolt Long sland p+ar^omm _<» < tt~ht *f 67 perent Cty, had a lt wng recd to6. But ;^ dt NfcS fete _oa at ahas h^the crows wkre at leastthree ffmes jt e _ S s s Maleas bg at thoe games*, * e Athlet Ba Y. f co" fedl W Factor ted ad p ahe dd, ho wever, beleve that the ' "fen ftst found out that t teamss losng record was a major < as named Mle Athlete of the factor n hs not beng elected to f Year tbout, you lourt was s t the e ert kcer Conference Frst May good But aft sad, Vho Team AllStms./.. cares?' Nobody reauy cwes abot " could have been pcked to the f sports _es heme. Lookl wat Frs Team, UStars f the team a P~ t and the could hawe j ust had even a.5 'tey r fbr,_ sad Ear KethO the ususlly sof Ax"* Coach Ronad Bash agreed that : n st.ofv. thes. ty ^e team' reccord was a hndrance. baodse e a fhous afterte fat that he was a fteshman belmmedof w kalso meant SComethng. They [the Ket, wo w ld sc caes who < elect the 9 stars felt, sttstc ; as :" :.7 L a ~.ponts poxad and. L~~ L] tbat snce ne hewa only a freshman, ebouads perer. and b*_d he woadh be avound for more years w sueh < _rss beng elected to the adm e hocmors later," Bash sad. : efcerbockes Soafence Seod Bash had omnly prase for hs star.;team A Stam and voted to the freshman. "} Me has outstandng ees msbo : AltEast talent hs potental s. hasfeal squad o the Basz tem unlmted. Mamy tmes ths year he ecdke AthleteCoferee th*ee was double awd trpleteamed and tmes* Met that be ddn't get hs full ;e smle scored. Hs playng those 'sae of acknowedements nl y adds to hs credt S doat fedel waspe ad to the future and. _" seem MMe.anybody as a possble xareer n professonal aout basketbw& OB _, baketbal, K:eth sad, don't Jttook at bow y pemm w etthnk couldgetnto the pros, f to wa or oe n Kh stayed at Stonay BrookL There s not. t.' ' * Ponderng the geson thatlobe enough news ccovetage here." Alaneblch' * ~ 7 :. AnntalStatesman Awards Meanngful to Mos t,. v vst Mt qute amy* Av a M7Wafd?, but some ope, Sae man's annual lb to mfe e o matlet"* # acom old jt muchbe~ot Ths year, ballos wwm to he ' atxkdc ow WSB' t Spot,ect an the.f O 9 wm Thoaong we. ' n w M r e Athet qb _.,.bm~ of te Yew o p _~toc a. ~~~BM one categ~y Cow of the Yew. Tle on for the chage s tlt then are too few femal e to oose from. Ts yew, he swm Mg eam, DsT alapons, plaed two of t the e,wnm Coah gm Lee amd Lea Hoadl Tbe hrd wnner, basketbal center gtr Ket, was sngled out as a r, d beg a m ber of a Wbat does the vng actually _n? LA yew, the top female athdlt, Cwol Nntwould not Mpt ber trophy, sayng that e d put too much emoms on statstcs." Hopete, _ r thrwee fe w_ ~~that fe a m h d y ther _ md me M for thr ta ad awcept the 8WM& heaw M mm *S'amte MALE ATHLETE Earl Keth Ron Schmeltzer John Brsson Phl Lenoach Art Trakas Kent Wtt Joe Grzano JryHouse Jeff Zahn Jack Bmet John GMt rk Lefter Ste Avgsno Ed Fanell Someday you'll be walkng along the athletc feld and you'll see a female joggng alongsde a playful golden puppy. The sunglasses propped/on top of her curly blond har reflect a carefree, happy feelng that reaches dowt nto her soul. That jogger s, a, swmmer and the puppy s half rsh setter, half golden retrever. The nseparable duo s Leah Holland and Commander Cody, and Holland has just been crowned Statesman's female "Athlete of the Year," When the autumn leaves start fallng, Holland pcks up her hockey stck and plays left halfback for the women's feld hockey team; Playng a defensve poston, Holland. ddn't score ths year, but she regards her experence as very rewardng. " really love hockey. t's a team sport. Everybody's nvolved at the same tme, whereas n swmmng, there's only one person n the water," she sad. After feld hockey, Holland not only changes sports but also the psychology nvolved. Whereas hockey s a tean sport, swmmng s very ndvdualstc. However, Holland makes t very clear that t's ndvdualstc only n the water. "f t weren't for the closeness and the atmosphere of the guys on the team, wouldn't be swmmng." There's another reason why Leah Holland s swmmng for Stony Brook ths year, and when you Ths s the Wae the V o tng menton the two words why, her eyes lght up and her body becomes suddenly anmated. "[Coach] Ken Lee s the reason why came here, and he s the reason why have stayed here." Whle n prep school, Holland vsted the Unversty of ndana and ts coach, Doug Counclman, consdered the czar of swmmng, who tutored Mark Sptz. Holland explaned to hm that she wanted to be near her Long sland home. Counclman, wthout battng an eyelash, recommended Lee and Stony Brook. She's been here ever snce. "Besdes Commander Cody [her puppy], coachng would be my frst love,' she sad. Agan the gleam was evdent n her eyes. " would love to coach world class swmmers." Those words arc comng from a world class swmmer. Over the recent Easter vacaton, Holland traveled to 'Arzona to compete n tthe Women's Naton Champonshps. She raced n the 5 and yard freestyles and the 5 yard butterfly events. After all the results were tabulated, Holland was ranked number 5 n the naton. So t you're ever down n the James Pub on a Thursday nght, at the rvng Dsco on a Frday nght, or hangng out n the asles on Saturday nght at a concert, you'll probably run nto Commander Cody and Leah Holland. Stony Brook's top female athlete. John Qunn FEMALE ATHLETE ' T " ls ah Scolland Sue Tobachnk Patty Germano My rr W S e^ of * / C.g*! : Pboe! Donsc Logan T P.ar ). M anu Rose lhust T..! sh)ust.^r { o.rrrjne Cha.cz~ r: Hm.!:.. Manoff to { *^; * '; R;t;,r ( O Leah Holland roach T Ken LCfP Fred Kemp Jm Smth John Ramsey Sandy Weeden Car Hvsh Ron Bash Paul Dudzck P 98 STATESMAN May

18 Coach of 't 'X ea 6 N~o Superstars on ButTey Won t :ny 7 :y By JON FREDMAN e Last year, Mark Lanprt appled lor ' '* ho wa La ' <, ';, a. ' S the the nt frc tat Sn cam nt hs as swmmers, we are dedcated," sad Lee. Season N t The trp to Albany made by tme When a team wns a dvson ttle, the coach as well as the team s naturally exuberant and delghted. But what happens when the same coach s elected Coach of the Year by swmmers ths year for the SUNY hs peers? Champonshps was consdered to be Ken Lee, born n 96, s Stony the hghlght of the season. Lee saw to Brook's swmmng coach. n an t that every swrmmer that deerved to electon whch chooses the coach of go wa there.. the year at ths unversty, Lee has "f people come down to roroutt been cted as a perfect example. every day and contrbute tothe team, What makes Lee so specal? The then. thnk they desere to swmmers have ther own theory. partcpatet" he sad. Patrot Mtch Prussman sad, After a twoyew absente, Lee, '"Coach [Lee] extends hmself so retuned to Stony Brook "'year toonce ag~a much that t s take natural to want to do on the choes as team leader. Allowng the well for hm." sw es to "Good kds make a coach," sad adjust to tber new. c, coeo Lee. " was lucky to have a great. coneentated on not beng hard on dem, ** group of swmmers ths year.". * : ; ; Admnseed Psychology "Next year we wm to be Lee oes most of hs ess to the tougher," sold Le. "Our pchology be admnstered durng the s stlhere.". season. "t Ls mportant for us to Lee s nev excludd fo any reman as a famly so we can help each swm team partes and,ey q _y does other.cope wth any problems," he he reject an taton o one. sad "Ths s our way of keepg dose ; We r lot e ft when and we feel that t s the reason for oursuccess." Guss. "He completes the amly." jons us," sad Pot s _ Bob' Most of ths psychokocal The tam has been _ technque was learned from Doc manyf th rver tbe eose of the Counclman, Lee's former coach at season but never more, nsped don. CkAnd Stott Cobege.jCouncma s wnen ue.u Ovns* Wjuc a master coach and he nterests hs sword n tde Patot lk*er rm swmmers by ntroducng new before the Queens COflW meet, n technques and deas. whc Stony Bro p d X. "We tred Doc's approach ths year Dvson te, and souted, "fs wth our SwmaThon [the lap stck t n and break t of." And that marathon to rae money for the team they dd. and the handcapped]. We showed that J~~~~~~~~~~ A Tale of Two Teams: By JON FREDMAN Maybe next year au Stony Brook teams can match the success of the basketball team and none wll share the fate of the football team. May 8, 97 Who would beleve that one year ago, wrote the above sentence for Statesman's yearend ssue? No, t was not supposed to be a cruel joke. The dea was to recap Stony Brook's sports year. Then, the two most publczed teams on campus were the dsbanded football dub and the Knckerbocker Conference Champonshp basketball team. Now t s the tme of year agan, and once more the same two teams have shared the spotlght. But, ther roles have changed. Even before the football club played ther Frst game last fall, great pressure was on them. The prevous year had been a dsaster. The club opened ther 97 season by losng to Albany State Unversty, 696. From that pont, the season went downhll. Btterness over ther losng season led to the obvousdssent. Eventually the squad became so mracked wth dssent and btterness toward Coach John Buckman that a practce attended by only players was commonplace. Fnally, the only alternatve was for the football dub to dsband, whk t dm at m can. N.A A Ths year was dfferent. Fred coach, workng wthout pay, s After the team unted dung task was to wn some gmes. preseason exp pas and fe.. "S ex.bw be] cms o nor What went wrong for Coad basketball team? Everythng, t preseason outlook faded as hs and lost followng tber onepol to Baruch College. The tem's a when all the black playes OM left the team. Bos then rm dormtores to fll the wyam deterorated and the varsty t wth a record. Next yew, for Bash's squad. The two bst team, EArl Keth and Ron Sch retum. Jm Petsche, a sarr o wa sdefned all year wth a k back next year. f moe flm, were to jon the squad, Bo Compared to ths yew, wh "catstrophc," next year sold Unlhn mavt W"M a CC&UMUS Mayge nw.x year, u owony roor tealms can mua the shoes of the l Wm ad none ws ohm H e toe of the besk tbl team. res,. me pf " h l! tb..e. qxr ^, Ul dpe lul foe ded ar wn THE STONY BROOK BASKETBALL TEAM traded ro w_ th footban club, as theyop from Tolowoc Chmons to a _esn May 7, 975 STATESMAN,,. q, ' X

19 ******v* Subscrbe NOW to The Weekly Fumnmer F^taaman Whle you are away for the summer the admnstraton wll decde:... MAL TO: STATESMAN. P.O. BO) X AE, STONY BROOK,, N.Y. 79 Mw BRNG UNON: SUTE 75. Make chutk Paybkle to: f NR grades should be F's. COUPON TO STATESMAN. S.B. L f dorm rents wll go up. STATESMAN. f ALL resdenttal students wll. _ Year Summer < Dnly be on a mandatory meal plan. $9. $.75 Name... Don't be suprsed Don't be suprsed n September,:.. Acdkbmn... Read about t n * :.cy w«^g... ****< SUMMER STATESMAN! 8tate Z...zp... >******* : >******* : r COtPON COUPON! SPECAL % dscount on regular prced merchandse wth ths ad, Su r l outque atd. * Shop No. 6 Old Towne Vllage o Nesconset, Hwy., Setauket O npots from nda, Palcstan, Morocco, etc. ~ Clothng for Hm and Her Beadspreads Jewelry Lamps PQcketbooks Waterppes. " Wallets.Gft tems Hours: Wed., Thurs., Fr. 6 PM Sat. PM C POUPON. COUPON ~~~~~ Summer Sesson Actvtes Board s.... l d so Courtyard Concerts on Tuesday, May, June and 7 from : a.m. p.m. n the Unon courtyard wth entertanment and refreshments. Flms on Thurs., Fr., Sat. f Sun. at 8: p.m. n the Unon Audtorum such as Day of the Jackal, Watermelon Man, A Rasn n the Sun and others. Rany Nght House wth performers on Tues., Fr. and Sat. and a dorror Flm Festval on mon. and Wed. at 9 p.m. Bke Jaunts to Carrage House, Thompson House, Hecksher S ta te Park.»/ / Campng n Kettletown State Park (Conn.) and upstate N.Y. Craft Bazaar, ee Cream Socal, Folles Burlesque, Beer Blast/Dance, BarBOues and more... For all faculty, staff and other Unversty communty members ;.D. cards may be purchased for $. For further nformaton, call 667. Z Page STATESMAN May

20 : C) LS l CD +NJ * * l > c#o wl a) a) u) To Q Supportng the Present Resdental College Program By JEANNE CAN KEVN YOUNG KEN FRETWELL n vew of the recent presentaton of the restructurng of the Housng Offce t s necessary to show how ths plan wll elmnate the ndvdualty and student control of each resdental college. The new proposeal as drected by Dr. Wadsworth, elmnates student nput n the hrng and frng of ts Program Coordnators and RA's. By creatng the poston of Resdental Advsor, who s hred by and responsble to the admnstraton, the supervson of RA's has been taen from the Program Coordnators and transerred to ths new poston. No longer wll the College Legslators have drect control over the RA's and Program Coordnators. 'Me new poston of Resdental Advsor wll be funded out of a State lne whch allows the hrng to be done by the Admnstraton. The new lmtatons of dutes and Aovd Turksh Trouble To the Edtor: Lately there has been a hate campagn aganst Turks launched n the Amercan Congress and the press. There have been demonstratons n New York to commemorate the mass kllngs of Armenan leaders n stanbul durng the turn of the century, whch was the frst of a seres of actons taken by the admnstrators of the Ottoman Empre aganst the Armenans, untl frst world war. We would lke to stress that hystercal racst and chauvnstc attacks nst the Turksh people serve only reactonary ends. The events of the tme can only be explaned n ther hsorcalpoltcal context and not by reference to "natonal' attrbutes. The ssue has to be vewed n the lght of the desgns of mperalsm on the Ottoman Empre. The natonal aspratons of the ethnc Armenan populaton were exploted by the mperalst powers, to fast gan an economc, poltcal and mltary responsbltes prevously desgnated to the Pram Coordnators, restcts the nternal procedure of the colleges. By creatng a pay celng of $, per year, many Program Coordnators who annually receve a hgher salary wll be unable to accept the Housng Offce's nvtaton to reapply next year. The plan to mplement graduate students, who wll receve a TAshp, as program coordnators wll destroy the character and contnuty of the resdental colleges Due to the transent nature of graduate student;, a hgh turnover rate can be expected whch would serously damage year to year programmng n the buldngs (.e., college programs, student busnesses). The new plan calls for the ndvdual RA to be more drectly accountable to the Admnstraton and ther employers. The nevtable progresson of ths new program s to place the selecton of RA's n the hands of admnstrators. foothold wthn the empre, and then try to dsmember t, by creatng nternal armed conflct n eastem Anatola, whle Turkey was embattled by Tsast Russa on the eastern front. These are events that led to the untold sufferng of hundreds of thousands of people. t s therefore only by recognzng the barbarc nature of mperalsm that one can correctly evaluate the Armenan queston at the turn of the century n the Ottoman Empre. Ayse Erzan May 6,975 n Prase of Pot To the Edtor: Ths letter s a rebuttal to the letter enttled 'Ths s for Larry" whch appeared n the May 5,975 ssue of Staesman. To ts author, would lke to say a few thngs: To begn wth, there s no swgnfat scentfc data relatng marjuana smokng and known medcal alments. n addton, my Mrends and frmly beleve n the postve effects of marjuana. Whle we are "hgh" when we smoke, we Tbe concept of a blanket job descrpton for RA's has never suted chckng n and out of te the needs of Stony Brook's Resntal We u^ M t o College Pa. Each budng must accept the *ONv of reman responsble to decde ther confdence by O Ck&Bs needs and formulate an proprae ot the ta lone w s RA job descrpton. RA's for next year have been presented wth ths job k n _ ad so 6 deapo snce Monday whle ther soe a _5e ae actual employee status s merely one who sl act a a Aa l of eommendaton by the buldng CtffD am am wb so gm Now watng fnal appal of the Hous Offce. Ths places next year's Cotluya RA's n opt w of so the poson of acceptng ths blanket (le. Qua ma s) a'd d job descrpton or facng the possble soca wlr At ts beft to te consequences of not beng formlly Prora orao d tl &A^k hred by the Admnstraton. We de ANRA's n ttos d Go ww The creaton of the Operaton Job kld mded ; Assant, a full tme person to work under the quad manager, Come to amd job n a smw at unthnkable for t wll elmnate QSupportfor the clrele necessary jobs for g e students Co~ee Prgra Tda hp on campus. Quads that have the td ad flor bb of greatest turnover of students. Le., G (The wrters B g. aeld and H Quads, need more than two (Thc wrters zre professonal people to work on te un)ydut^ 8U8B are by no means "wasted" as you so navely mply. "Wasted" s merely a synonym for beng very stoned. Dd you kmow that? Perhaps you should smoke a jont, and then talk. Smokng marna has no ll effects on my mnd or my body. Furthermore, t has done nothng whatsoever to alter the progress of my maturaton process. stroly w est that you seek out the mmaturty h your own personalty that causes you to be so closed mnded n aptng the pleasures and habts of others. Lty May 6, 975 Prvate Property To the Edtor: n Mr. Durand's Aprl Statemn columh, he wrote of the ands behnd Tabler and Stap X as areas for students to consder when they wsh to "get away Aom t au." What Mr. Durand dd not know s that the land he speaks of (partcularly the meadow and adjonng woods) s prvate property, not state property. W Whfle we nd our e on a not advene to p e g nature, we do not at our "_ tox become a EAn d f netvduls ha rted ba ta meadows and cut duow Uss fo fn wood. We w d. cooperan Cka.» A o S Expandng the Menu To the Edtor would le to pt e proposed by Tom Vte (AS, 976) for _ug fe a s lt_ bob od a A dnt _ma pkn. Dsh the prsp=adsmr* t ees to tme that such a det woold be autzlay ba X for added flavor and al w l menu hat g bn _y and Admnstraton be proot tel ereetd Lcol_ ofn «7 8dod lr 7 A Better Brand of Meat, Grade A, Prme Cut By JAYSON WECHTER must dsagree wth Tom Vtale's Aprl 8 suggeston that onequarter of the freshman class be slaughtered, prepared and served n a student run food servce, despte the fact that t would ease overcrowdng on campus and provde the survvng freshmen wth an alternatve to Horn and Hardart. used to be a freshman myself, and some of my best frends are freshmen. Some of them would look qute unappetzng, broled, roasted, fred or baked. And let's face t, the average freshman's det sn't partcularly nutrtous. Besdes the mass produced crap they get from Horn and Hardart, freshmen eat much too much junk food such as Bg Macs, Jack steaks, fred rat sht, and other sundry tems. No matter how you cook them, freshmen aren't gong to be partcularly healthy to eat. Snce they're always runnng around, playng softball or basketball or just gettng ther regular horzontal exercse, freshmen wll be too well muscled, and therefore, tough. f we are to eat anyone, suggest that t be the admnstrators. They earn enough to eat well (when was the last tme you saw T.A. Pond n the unon cafetera?) and would therefore be far more nutrtous than your average freshman. Just go to John Toll's house one nght, see what he's havng for supper, then come back to H Cafetera and compare! For the most part, admnstrators have more paunchtherefore more meat. Most of them do lttle but st at desks all day, thus nsurng tenderness. n Japan, a specal breed of cattle s kept nactve, fed the fnest grans, and gven beer to drnk, so that they produce the tenderest meat on the sland. Our admnstrator are noted for ther nactvty, and a quck glmpse nto the Faculty Commons Room wll prove that they get ther proper daly ntake of alcohol as well. Job ncentve Rather than eat the freshmen wth the lowest cumulatve averages, why not eat the admnstrators judged to be the most nept or ncompetent? What an ncentve for them to do ther jobs property! Under threat of beng eaten by the students f they don't re n up, admnstrators mght fnall he some real ncentve to end trplg, shorten lnes at the bunar, and end the usual bureaucratc bullsht we an endure. The only concevable ob e s that some students would retue to eat them for fear of catchng whatever bureaucratc dsease they had (The wrter s an SUSB undergraduate.) May 7, 975 STATESMAN Page

21 CD Com a. r,, c#o wlj * o Q a) >* _ Bully Pulpt By AL LYNCH ncredble as t may seem, George Wallace probably has a stronger argument for the lshment of captal punshment than anyone, though he doesn't know t hmself. Last week, n an appearance before a Congressonal subcommttee, Wallace testfed that tghter enforcement of exstng laws and strcter sentences were needed n order to curb the rsng crme rate. He clamed that such measures had worked n hs home state of Alabama. However, upon that pont, Wallace was confronted wth the fact that Montgomery, Alabama had the greatest fease n murder rate of any U.S. cty. Wallace had a quck retort. " am aware of that," he sad. "But murder, you know, s a crme of passon, and there's nothng you can do to prevent crmes of passon." To ratonal men, n full control of ther facultes, the possblty of a death sentence mght well prove nt deterrent to prevent them from commttng murder. However, most murders occur between people who have strong feelngs toward one another and are, as George Wallace, no bleedng heart lberal, ponts out, crmes of passon. The threat of death wll not deter such people from commttng murder. Dscretonary Nature Ever snce the Supreme Court decded that the death penalty as practced n the U.S. s unconsttutonal because of the dscretonary nature n whch t s appled, states have restored the death penalty n accordance wth the Court's 97 decson of Furman v. Georga. Proponents of the death penalty contend that the new lmtatons of ther death laws cut down on the dscreton whch the Court faulted n the Furman case. They justfy the laws on the same grounds that death penalty advocates have cted for decadesdeterrence. George Wallace admts that there can be no deterrence to murder. And, Governor Danel Evans of Washngton, a Republcan who s expected to veto death penalty legslaton, says that "here s no emprcal evdence whch ndcates that captal punshment acts as a deterrent to crme." Several years ago, the U.S. Senate passed a resoluton whch approved of the death penalty as punshment for certan crmes. Upon ts passng, Senator Harold Hughes, who had opposed the resoluton, motoned that f captal punshment were a real deterrent, all executons should be broadcast lve on publc televson so that everyone would know for sure what would be n store for them f they ever commtted murder. The moton was overwhelmngly defeated. Deterrence, anyone? Once concedng the nondeterrence of the death penalty, the only functon t serves s to wreak vengeance, a powerful yet selfdestructve human trat. Murderng a murderer can never brng the vctm back to lfe. t can only satsfy some very real, but rratonal desre for sadstc bloodlettng, somethng ths naton had supposedly repudated at Nuremburg. When faced wth the logc of ts actons, the U.S. Senate admtted that t was not nterested n deterrng crme, but rather n the punshment of the offender for punshment's sake, no doubt a lvely canpagn ssue. Random Handful Apart from the vew that captal punshment s unconsttutonal per se, others object to the death By Al Lynch To Kll or Not to Kll; Now That s the Queston penalty as appled. Justce Wllam Douglas noted the "uncontrolled dscreton of jures" that allowed the penalty to be "selectvely appled" to such as the poor, and especally to blacks. Justce Byron Whte noted how nfrequently t had been appled and Justce Potter Stewart sad that t had been "wantonly mposed on a caprcously selected random handful." ndeed, as Professor Charles Black of the Yale Law School notes n hs book, Captal Punshment, The nevtablty of Caprce and Msae, "No socety s gong to kll everybody who meets certan precse verbal requrements, put on statute books wthout awareness or coverage of the nfnty of socal factors that the real world can produce." Asde from the legal ramfcatons of the death penalty are ts moral mplcatons, and what they say about us as a socety. Hal Burton of Newsday, who has wtnessed executons, wrtes that "anyone who supports captal punshment should receve an nvtaton to an executon. t can be an electrocuton, t can be a hangng, t can be a gassng, oras n Utah at one tmet can be a frng squad. Watch the reducton of a human, however fallble, however twsted, to a lump of flesh. Ask yourself: Has ths accomplshed anythng?" ' The hopelessness, the lonelness, and the profound despar of anyone dyng or watng to de by force, especally when socety welds and sanctons the use of that force, s a terrble ndctment of manknd. ndeed, how far has the human race really progressed from the poson gas chambers of Nazsm when t nsttutonalzes the kllng of human bengs? (The wrter s a regular columnst for Statesman. ) Remember, Don~t Beleve Everythng You Read By BRUCE TENENBAUM Don't beleve what you read! n the Aprl edton of Statesman there s a revew of Rck Wakeman's new album. The revew s a typcal example of Statesman's general lack of competence. Frst, the revewer states qute matter of factly that Wakeman left Yes because he felt that he ddn't have the opportunty to compose. Ths s a latant untruth. f ths had any at all on hs leavng Yes, t was ertanl mnmal. Wakeman left Yes because of dfferences between hm and the group. Beng a beer drn g omnvore, t was dffcult for hm to dentfy wth four bppedout relgous vegeaa qbthe four and he dsagreed gmady on the dton that ther musd s a band wa to take. Wakeman *waned move eady Yes played n concert and shorter sons on ther now adbumsthe Tdles from Topgpc es albusm and tour showed Wakeman that they were certanly not Fgng to concede to hs whms. That s why Rck Wakeman left Yes. As f one matter of fact dstorton wasn't enough, S n stated n the very next paragraph that Wakeman began work on hs frst album mmedately after leavng the band. The truth s that he had composed and recorded hs frst album whle he was a member of Yes, n fact, several Yes members appear on the album. The album was recorded whle Wakeman was wth Yes. How could he not start work on t untl after he left? t would appear reasonable that anyone who would revew an album and nclude hstorcal data would at least know what he's talkng about! f Statesman had bothered to check the dates on the Henry V album they would've at least appeared somewhat ntellgent or they would have left t n assumng ther readers to be too gnorant to notce! ncdentally, Wakeman not only pd and recorded hs frst album before leavng Yes but composed hs second album as well! t pears that not havng tme to compose was not one of hs major problems. t s evdent from the frst half of the revew that Statesman knows lttle, f anythng, about the album or artst. t s common n Statesman revews to spend the frst half of the artcle on a hstory of the artst, usually readng as f t were taken drectly from a record company promotonal release. A revew s for a revew, not a lfe story! When read a revew of an album am nterested n what the revewer has to say about the album, not on what the artst was dong fve years ago! So come on, don't treat your readers lke dots. We know who the artst s or we wouldn't be readng the revew. t s Statesman's revewers who apparently don't know the facts. Another pont: last week Statesman dd an ntervew wth Pete Dorfman as Stony Brook's jazz promoter. Yet, t was Bll Dorr who booked Lookout Farm and Elvn Jones and t was Mark Zuffante who booked Mahavshnu Orchestra. Last month, Statesman captoned a pcture of Elvn Jones as Elvn Bshop and vceversa. t s extremely sad to note that Statesman has made just such errors for every ssue for the entre semester! Yet many correctons are never prnted. t s equally sad that the same dstortons, rrelevances and les appear n ther news secton. Last week, a member of the Polty Budget Commttee, dscussng why he supported cuttng the basketball team's funds, sad, " only know what read n the papers [Statesman]." Now you know why the Polty Senate acts lke a bunch of bananas. The student newspaper s msnformng the students, the student government and the communty. t s obvous that an alternatve news and musc nformaton source on the Stony Brook campus s necessary. f not, we wll all soon be swngng from the trees! (The wrter s the Musc and Arts Drector of WUSB Rado.) All opnons expressed on the vewponts pages, whether n letters, vewponts, columns, or cartoons, are those of the wrter or artst and do not necessarly represent the vews of Statesman or ts edtoral board. P Page STATESMAN' May 7, 975

22 t A Stony Brook Agenda +EJ a l As the class of 975 bds farewell to ts alma mater, no doubt many graduates Wll stop to reflect about what ther educaton at Stony Brook has meant to them. Some wll be gong off to graduate school, ether out of choce or out of lack of anythng else to do, some fortunate ones wll ether travel or start jobs, and a great many graduates wll look back and feel that ther educaton here has not provded them wth anythng tangble or any marketable sklls. The problem of tomorrow s here today. How effectve s the academc program at Stony Brook? How well has t suted the educatonal, socal and professonal needs of ts students? And, more mportantly, what drectton wll the Unversty take n the comng years? These problems have long ago begun to manfest themselves, but the graduatng class of 975 s feelng ther ll effects more so than any other class before. What s needed s an entre serous reevaluaton of the academc goals of ths nsttuton, wth the avalablty of a means for rapd and comprehensve change. Just over a year ago, the Mddle States Assocaton of Colleges and Unverstes made ts evaluaton of Stony Brook as part of the reaccredtaton process that all unverstes must undergo. t sad that Stony Brook s an nsttuton of nternatonal reputaton n the tmehonored tradton of nsttutons such as Berkeley and Mchgan. t related that Stony Brook s to be noted for ts excellent faculty, ts notable research and ts remarkable growth. But t also noted some defcences that when analyzed reveal that Stony Brook s not lvng up to ts full potental. There must be a reason for the excellent ratng Stony Brook receved on ts assests, real and potental. But lkewse there must be a reason for the snallke pace at whch the Unversty s proceedng at reversng academc solaton, fragmentaton, dssatsfacton, msmatched expectatons on the part of students and the faculty as well as the abomnable physcal condtons of the campus. Because of the enormous bureaucracy that the State Unversty system affords, because of the uncertan nature of the fundng of the Unversty and the concerns of many to just admnstrate ths tremendous operaton, personal consderatons of ndvduals tend to get lost n a myrad of formaltes whereby the student s the one who ultmately loses. Just as Stony Brook s noted for ts ~~ academc excellence across the naton, so t s known for ts mpersonalty towards students. t s a sad testmony that two thrds of the applcants who are excepted for admsson to Stony Brook choose not to enroll here. Rather, for the most part. they choose to enroll not n the elte schools such as Harvard or Yale, but at sster State Unversty nsttutons. The drecton Stony Brook must take n the future s clear: t must concentrate on the socal physcal and academc ambance that s conducve to educaton and socal receptveness on the part of both the students and the faculty. To do ths, defntve measures, many of whch have already been suggested by the Commttee on the Reform of Undergraduate Educaton, must be taken quckly. Frst, a complete revew of the purpose of undergraduate educaton s desperately needed. Whle CRUE made recommendatons as to how changes could be made, they were thnkng wthn the current framework of the unversty. Do students really want just a lberal educaton? Should there be more emphass towards professonal or vocatonal tranng, or should the emphass be on personal mprovement and edfcaton? The nature of the economy provdes some nsght nto that problem. Second, t has been repeatedly noted that students today are not up to par wth regard to lterary sklls. The ablty to communcate effectvely s a prerequste to any educaton, professonal or vocatonal. and ths school does not adequately tran ts students n ths regard. Some form of readng fortfcaton should be made avalable, f not requred of all students. Thrd, the freshman semnar program should be expanded so as to nclude not only freshmen but everyone. The program allows students to partcpate n small semnars wth faculty on an nformal bass n contrast to the overszed lectures. Fourth, the task where students select ther programs should be made a less burdensome one. There are hundreds of coursed and a student often has lttle dea of even what dscplne n whch to concentrate. The Unversty should concentrate ts efforts nto rearrangng ts courses nto thematc clusters, so that a gven theme can be chosen by a student as an area of concentraton not just from one department. These are only a few suggestons of many that can be made. But the entre Unversty communty s just sttng dly by and makng no effort to convert them proposals nto realty. For Stony Brook to fulfll ts academc msson, these concerns must be addressed and acton must be taken now. VOLUME 8 NUER 8 w VOLUME S NUMBR 8 WEDNESDAY, MAY, A 7 StatesmanS "L t Each Become Aware" Jay Bors EdtornChef Jonathan D. Salant Managng Edtor Robrt Schqwartz Busnes Manager Doug Fesher Assodate Edtor News Drector: Ruth Bonapace; No Edtors: Sand Brooks, Davd Glman. Carolyn Martey; OffCampu Now Edtor: Jason Manne; sstnt OffCampus NewsEdtor: Uss Berge; Frature/Arts Dlrect: MkhW J.S. Durand; Arts Edtor: Steph Dembner; Feature Edtor: Albers; Sports Edtor: Jonathan Fredman; Assstant Sports Eds "Gerald Res, Stuart M. Saks' Photo/Graphcs Drecor: Lou Manna; Photo Edtors: Davd Fr, Kenneth Katz, Gregg Solomon; Edtoral Assstats Rene Ghadm; Advertsng Manar: Jm Wdbr; Offce Manqprs Carole Myles; Producton Mpager: Frank Cappelolo. SrATESMAHN, stu"'w ewsp of my. at Stony Brook, s publtlatf tlwe Wm& WMH or ymy, W, nmy, and Frday, Spt to M~y, *xcot durkvt ton prlods, Z a wek durlng the months of June, July, and AuWM by the stotwnn Anoctlon, *n unnoorpoftd, nonprofnt organaton. Presdntt Jay Q. Barfs Vce Prnt: Jonathan D. Saelnt{ Treaurrs Robert Schwrtz Scretary: Do. Mlh nv addres P.O. Box AE, Stony Book, Now York 79. Edtorll and bumnm phone: (56) 669. Su lbr to AmoWMfd Pr_ Represnte by Ntonal EdmtklwW _te Sew, 8 East Stret, No York Clty. Prnted by Smtn ews, t Ora MN, Stnkhtow, N. M York. Entered scond ef mttr at StonyBrook,,,w York. lq% ^ r AO so^nv, lyen \. m' rw~~~~ft *H N, Mav STATESMAN. ^',..,\(., ' s " ^

23 .W r don%& N /' [stateman%.w. _l ^ ^ Wednesday, May ^ ' * f * f» t Freshma an fe cers, Succeed n Pato Vctr T By GERALD RES Stony Brook's future was on dsplay aganst Cty College yesterday. Coach Rck Smolak started the freshman combnaton of second baseman Blly anncello and shortstop John Smonett. annce~o had rve hts n sx trps and Smonett was fourforsx as the Patrots defeated CCNY, 79, n a Knckerbocker Conference baseball game. "t's good to see they young guys producng,"' Smolak sad. "They're the future. John has always had the good bat but Blly ddn't have much of a chance to ht then. Now he's gettng the chance and he's comng around ncely. He just keeps peckng away. He's really mproved a lot snce the fall." "Coach [Smolak] has been helpng me a lot lately," lanncello, sad. "My swng s better now and 'm httng the ball good and soldly through the holes. 've also been pullng the ball lately, whch hadn't done much n the past. The key has been to get my weght back and my hands forward when swng." Both Loue Cruz and Matt Tedesco, the regular shortstop and second baseman, are senors, playng n ther last year at Stony Brook. t appeared that the two freshmen are n the process of beng groomed to assume the postons on a 'regular bass next year, but Smolak would only say Aha "'they are the lkely canddates for the nfed." Whle Smonett and anelo had mpressve games, another freshnma, Prank DeLeo, gave a dsppontng peromne n relef of startng and wnng ptcher Mlk "Buzzy" GarofoULa By MnSWENEYNN n three nnngs of work, DeLoeo, surrendered eght walks and eght runs, whle strkng out sx. n all, he threw ptches, an ncredbly hgh fgure for so few nnngs of work. "He's been makng mechancal mstakes," Smolak sad of DeLeo's poor performance. "He seemed nervous and tense and there's no reason to be n that stuaton," DeLeo entered the game wth MATT TEDESCO takes a cut n yesterday's game aganst CCNY. Tedesco doubled and.scored a mun n three trps to the plate. get hs chance to clam ths ttle too. A New YorkStony Brook fr e ma specal threegame tournament has, been Gary Mawe won the East Coostcoe orazed and s to be held at a tme bow"n haponshp last Sunday, the convenent for both bowlers n Chcago. culnaonof gamen bowled over a Mayor's bowlng excellence was partly t*eday perod n whch Meyer bad a result of hs development from the fall averge 9. sepmester to the current one. n the The tournament, n whch more than Thursday Nght Bowlng League, hs colleges had partcpated, began Aprl mprmovement was the major reason hs 8 at Bowkmore Lanes wth fve Stony team (**Cohen's AUStars") fnshed n Brook entrants. owre v erma was the frst place. Mayer concluded the year only one fortunate enouglh of ths group wth a 8 average, an mprovement of to reach the semfnals wth a strong ntal eght game seres of,56. placng hm n thrd, 6 pns shy of frst. Another Stony Brook bowler had fallen pns short of qualfyng for the next round. The semfnals were held Saturday, May, wth Mayer rollng another eghtlgame set aganst the 5 other semfnalsts. Ths tme, Mayer rolled a,55 seres, good enough for fourth place and a berth n the fnals. The fnals were held the next day as Mayer was ptted aganst the top seven qualfers. Unlke the prevous rounds, he was requred to bowl twce aganst each of hs compettors ndvdually wth ponts beng awarded accordngly throughout the 6gane set. " dd not realze had won," Mayer sad. "After games, was n fourth [out of eght] and dd not realze my chances of wnnng untl the eghth frame of the last game." But t seemed that he was ready for the challenge and fnshed stron, rollng a 5 game, hs th game of the tournament. The only obstacle preventng Mayer fro m beng recognzed as the U.S. WHO ARE THESE DEGENERATES? They ar CofcateChamons the West Coast Mc~owellcup. (Stocy on pqe 9.) WO^^ Uwemb^, n duea Atme be wll the Patrots leadng,. "As a "Ralph's a contact htter," Smolak freshman, he needs a lot of work,"9 sad', "and now he's just not makng Smolak sad. "He should mprove by playng durng the summer."' contact. t may be that the problem s becomng psychologcal." Another Patrot who has been havng n the fourth nnng, Garofola came to trouble of late s frst baseman Ralph bat wth the bases loaded and one out; Rossn. Rossn, n a horrendous battng Rossn was on deck. Fearng he would slump, struck out hs frst two tmes at agan fal to make contact and thereby bat, leavng three runners stranded on strand more Patrots, he mplored base. Garofola, "Please ht a homer, Buzzy." Rossn's wsh came true as Garofola jumped on the frst ptch and sent the ball over the leftfleld fence for a grand slam. Rossn then grounded weekly to second as he drew mock cheers from hs teammates and the few fans. n the ffth, Rossn, dubbed "the mad bunter," broke hs htless sken wth a bunt sngle. pns. t s probable that hs scores would have been even hgher except that he worked as a lane attendant durng the hours of the fthursday league. He sad that the fact that he was ben nterrupted to fx broken lanes detracted from hs concentraton and subsequently hs performance. Next year Stony Brook wll be represented n the Eastern Collegate AP McArdle, 8 Smonett, SS Fanell, CF Kruk, C Derenfeld, C Garofola, P DeLeo, P Rossn, B Mller, B Tedesco, LF Martnez, LF Trakas, RF Wnfeld, RF lanncello. B AB R 7 H 5 Na Movl N, RBl 5 CCNY Stony Brook 7 lx7 EMller. Left on BaseCCNY 9. Stony Brook. Double PlaysStony Brook. Stolen BasesFanefll, Kruk. BKruk, Tedesco, McArdle. Blannlcello HrGarofola. SFGarofotaw Garofola, (W, ) OeLjRo Chtcago Nex fr Es s Top CollegateoBower ( Bowlng Conference. Ths tearn wll bowl on Sundays n New York aganst teams from the metropoltan avea6 many of whom sent ther best bowlers to the toumnament that Mayer won. As of now, ths club s not funded snce ths team was only n the plannng stages when budgets were submtted to the Polty Senate. However, many of the prospectve bowlers are hopeful that they may yet get funded through theprga and Servces Commttee (PSC). the resdents of James C. the hall that s the projcted! wnner of the Pagp STATESMAN May 7,975

The Great Chain of Being

The Great Chain of Being The Great Chan of Beng AUTHOR: Susan Barry Frankln Hgh School, Frankln, WI Introducton In ths lesson, students wll use prmary and secondary sources to develop a better understandng of the contnuty and

More information

Twenty-Third Publications

Twenty-Third Publications Introducton Advent s a tme to wat for Jesus and to prepare for hs comng at Chrstmas. People all over the world wat and watch n dfferent ways for Jesus comng. You wll learn about some of them n ths book.

More information

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

Philip Goes. Lesson at a Glance. Go! Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll name the Ethopan as the man who Phlp taught about Jesus. The chldren wll practce sharng the Bble wth each other. The chldren wll state that God wants

More information

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3

We Go to Church. Lesson at a Glance. Worshiping God. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 3 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state a characterstc of a dscple. The chldren wll sng and pray together. The chldren wll state how they can be lke dscples, e.g., share, pray, read the

More information

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report

Friends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report Ths publcaton was dgtsed by Rochester Cathedral Research Guld Homepage: www.rochestercathedralresearchguld.org Adran s Wall Frends of Rochester Cathedral Annual Report 20-202 G. Keevll Abstract: Test pts

More information

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P.

I i. to read them to you and as you u~derstznd them and read along Kewark Avenue, J. C. ti. J. I 38- Inv. James P. AND PLACE OF Dstectve Charles F. llvas, Dsde County Publc Safety, kpartment, Homcde Sectoq obert Hlavac, nv. James P. Farrell, ~udsoh County Prosecutor% Offce 59 5 Kewark Avenue, J. C. t. J. Lor1 12, 1973,

More information

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1

I Am Special. Lesson at a Glance. God Made Me. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Plan. Bible Story Text. Bible Truth. Lesson 1 Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God created the frst man and woman, Adam and Eve. The chldren wll dentfy dfferent parts of the human body. The chldren wll thank God for ther

More information

And God is able to make all grace abound to you...

And God is able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you... And God s able to make all grace abound to you, so that havng all suffcency n all thngs at all tmes, you may abound n every good work. Thnk of t. God hmself

More information

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant

v. Theresa Keeping Defendant UNTED STATES DSTRCT COURT for the Central Dstrct of Calforna Chuck Foster Plantff v. Theresa Keepng Defendant Cvl Acton No. SACV14-0004-AG-DFMx; consoldated wth SACV14-0012-AG-DFMx PRODUCTON OF DOCUMENTS

More information

Brothers and Sisters

Brothers and Sisters Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll state that God makes famles. The chldren wll demonstrate ways to be helpers at home. The chldren wll thank God for ther famles. Bble Story Text Geness

More information

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion

Courses Inactived Since Prior to 1992 and Courses Pending Deletion Courses nactved Snce Pror to 1992 and Courses Pendng Deleton Dv Course Number and Ttle nactvaton Date 311 CAAS 400 / MHM 457. The Muscs of Afrcan Amercans. 311 CAAS 420 / Anthro. 347. Race and Ethncty.

More information

.tl",- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, ":~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4

.tl,- ' --;'.~~ TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH \ '.~-, :~~~ A Response to Recent Allegation~':,: :~;..:;~~~ ::f4 ~ ' I c l! 'I I tl"- ' --;'~~ " :" ~- --t"' ~ : r tcj"'" :: " ~~' "! j ":;;c' :;;t ~ ; r TOWARD OUR COMMON G OF CORRECT FAITH " ' : ; \!';[~J" 1 "1t~:::::~ f" ; j I ; : '~;: t A Response to Recent Allegaton~'::

More information

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan

Hannah Talks to God. Lesson Plan Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll understand that prayng s how we talk to God. The chldren wll learn that Hannah prayed for a baby and God answered her prayers. The chldren wll pray.

More information

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries.

The Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica 30th Anniversary Rededication. March 6, 2011 University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries. The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca 30th Annversary Rededcaton March 6, 2011 Unversty of Florda George A. Smathers Lbrares Thrty Years of The Isser and Rae Prce Lbrary of Judaca Unversty of Florda

More information

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38

UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 UNSTOPPABLE THEN and NOW A LIFE WELL LIVED Acts 20:17-38 Can anyone tell me what the theme of our summer seres on Acts s? That s rght UNSTOPPABLE. In the power of the Holy Sprt, the Good News of Jesus

More information

This Child Has Been Sent by God

This Child Has Been Sent by God Consensus Volume 20 ssue 2 n Prase of Valant Women Artcle 10 11-1-1994 Ths Chld Has Been Sent by God Bonne J. Scharf Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://scholars.wlu.ca/consensus Recommended Ctaton

More information

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH

Vision and. Focus Areas. Catholic Schools Youth Ministry Australia CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR AND YOUTH Catholc Schools Youth Mnstry Australa Vson and Focus Areas JUNIOR AND YOUTH MINISTRY YOUTH MINISTERS INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC LEADERS FORMATION NETWORK STUDENT POST SCHOOL YOUTH MINISTERS TEACHER AND CHURCH

More information

Josiah Loves God s Word

Josiah Loves God s Word Lesson at a Glance Lesson Objectves The chldren wll dentfy the Bble as God s word. The chldren wll dentfy Josah and specfc events surroundng the Bble s dscovery n the temple. The chldren wll vew the Bble

More information

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018

DMITRI IGLITZIN October 22, 2018 DMITRI IGLITZIN Igltzn@workerlaw.com Orgnal va emal to: pdc@pdc.wa.gov and peter.lavallee@pdc.wa.gov Peter Lavallee Executve Drector Washngton State Publc Dsclosure Commsson PO Box 40908 Olympa, WA 98504-0908

More information

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections

Notice of Copyright. Citing Resources from the Western History Collections Notce of Copyrght Publshed and unpublshed materals may be protected by Copyrght Law (Ttle 17, U.S. Code). Any copes of publshed and unpublshed materals provded by the Western Hstory Collectons are for

More information

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er

Copyr ight Copyright Tridonic GmbH & Co KG All rights reserved. Manufactur er luxcontrol DALI XC Copyr ght Copyrght Trdonc GmbH & Co KG All rghts reserved. Manufactur er Trdonc GmbH & Co KG Färbergasse 15 6851 Dornbrn Austra Tel. +43-(0)5572-395-0 Fax +43-(0)5572-20176 www.trdonc.com

More information

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye

The Ensign. Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch SEPTEMBER 2015 Prepare Ye, Prepare Ye by Hgh Prest Brad Gault Prepare ye, prepare ye, O nhabtants of the earth, for the judgment of our God s come: behold, and lo, the Brdegroom

More information

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform

Methods for Measuring and Compensating Ball Screw Error on Multi-mode Industrial CT Scanning Platform 5th Internatonal Conference on Measurement, Instrumentaton and Automaton (ICMIA 06) Methods for Measurng and Compensatng Ball Screw Error on Mult-mode Industral CT Scannng Platform Yuje Zhang, a, Shangfeng

More information

989 James Robert Todd

989 James Robert Todd xv. 989 James Robert Todd Bographcal Sumnnary (1324) Todd was born on December 10, 1919, n Groesbeck, Tex. (2165) He held a varety of occupatons. He worked approxmately 2 years at Sue's Used Car Lot n

More information

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE

i» M < 1 I I MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION CHICAGO REGIONAL OFFICE » M < 1 I I ~W ' TT UNITED STTES OF MERIC TCOM HERING MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BORD CHICGO REGIONL OFFICE IN THE MTTER OF: LEROY J. PLETTEN vs. UNITED STTES OF THE RMY DEPRTMENT Transcrpt of the" Deposton

More information

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them.

c The dogs did what they were told so that their masters did not hit them. The Call of the Wld Jack London The story step by step 1 Lsten to Chapter 1 (from Judge Mller s place... to...he never forgot t. ). Lst the parts of the body that you hear. The frst one s an example. Check

More information

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas

Evaluation of geometrical characteristics of Korean pagodas Evaluaton of geometrcal characterstcs of Korean pagodas *Fahmeh Yavartanoo 1) and Thomas Kang 2) 1), 2) Department of Archtecture and Archtectural Engneerng, Seoul Natonal Unversty, Seoul 08826, Korea

More information

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your

5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT: Your Honor. the State would. BY MR. SERMOS: Yes, sir. We'll agree to that. We will release him, too, Your Drect Examnaton - Manley 465 1 BY MR. HARPER: Your Honor, we would ask that 2 Deputy Frank be fnally released from our subpoena. 3 BY THE COURT: He '11 be released from hs 4 subpoena. 5 BY MR. ROSENBLATT:

More information

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11.

I I. I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I. i fi Natural Histor~ Societ~ ~ i ~ti~ f. ~ ofthe ~ f~ Pubiished by the Society. 11. If)?S ~ 2 67 f=---=--~----~ f! CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS j ~ ofthe ~ f Natural Hstor~ Socet~ ~ ~ of the ~ ~ Uf\verst':J of lllf\os, lf I w I T H A L I s T 0 F M E M B E R s. I ~t~ f I I f~ Pubshed by the

More information

ALL-OUT PLEA TO CONGRESS URGED ON FIRE AND POLICE SOCIAL SECURITY BILL

ALL-OUT PLEA TO CONGRESS URGED ON FIRE AND POLICE SOCIAL SECURITY BILL C w t f ' S-e/WAA. L E l L D E t 'Amerca** Large»t Weekly for Publc Employee* Vol. XV No. 50 Tueaday, August 20. 1957 Prce Ten Cent Vllage H P 0 V''. '- CAPlOl. ^VALON ALBANV 1 N Y COttP ng ge 16 ALL-OUT

More information

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER

CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER The Ensgn Zarahemla Branch APRIL 2016 CALL UPON GOD HIGH PRIEST DEAN FALCONER SEVERAL YEARS AGO WHEN I WAS WORKING FOR THE MARRIOTT CORPORATION, I WAS SENT FOR NINE MONTHS TO BAYLOR MEDICAL CENTER IN DALLAS,

More information

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church

Design Review Board. John Ellsworth, Environmental Planner on behalf of Verizon Wireless, First Presbyterian Church I t 1 s Desgn Revew Board F February 6, 2018 Those present were: s I $ James H. McMullan, Vce Charman Carolyn D. Presche, Member C. Sherrll Dayton, Member Robert D. Caruso, Member Bruce A.T. Sska, Member

More information

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14

A DIGEST OF CHAPTER 14 STUDES N JOSHUA- JUDGES-RUTH A DGEST OF CHAPTER 14 Vv. 1-5 The plan for dvdng the land. God told Joshua to dvde the land by lot (v. 2). Ths plan had already been selected durng the days of Moses (Numbers

More information

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13.

Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRIL 9, NO. 13. Tech. VOL. X. BOSTON, APRL 9, 1891. NO. 13. Publshed on alternate Thursdays, durng the college year, by the students of the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. BOARD OF EDTORS. FREDERCK HOPPN HOWLAND,

More information

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017

Processional. a writer s cottage. Alexandria, Virginia, 2017 Introducton to the 2017 edton Processonal a wrter s cottage Alexandra, Vrgna, 2017 A plaque hangs above my desk: Tell Your Story. Those words serve as a daly nvtaton to a sprtual practce. Tellng a story

More information

PH/ICES REALIZED. 1.\ll.:\~14.1~:\-'rST.~1)I4.STlllt\ TI~11. Iun~I~\ -\\-00n, ~~ \ I..II ~Onx I.\ S.\TI-nn.-\\'. JI-.xl~21 - sl-~n.\\-.j'-~i~ 2:;.

PH/ICES REALIZED. 1.\ll.:\~14.1~:\-'rST.~1)I4.STlllt\ TI~11. Iun~I~\ -\\-00n, ~~ \ I..II ~Onx I.\ S.\TI-nn.-\\'. JI-.xl~21 - sl-~n.\\-.j'-~i~ 2:;. -... j, :.- ~.' PH/CES REALZED ; ".. " ",,.\ll.:\~4.~:\-'rst.~)4.stlllt\ T~ un~~\ -\\-00n, ~~ \.. ~Onx.\ S.\T-nn.-\\'. J-.xl~2 - sl-~n.\\-.j'-~~ 2:;.2000.\. ,'"'... ::: w._...... -. ".' '.. --- ~-------

More information

Improvements of Indoor Fingerprint Location Algorithm based on RSS

Improvements of Indoor Fingerprint Location Algorithm based on RSS Internatonal Journal of Scence Vol.4 No.1 017 ISSN: 1813-4890 Improvements of Indoor Fngerprnt Locaton Algorthm based on RSS Quyue Zhu a, Qang Yu b, Q Lu c and Kun Sh d School of Computer and Software

More information

>-> ; i

>-> ; i b M E A C H A M P A R K : A H S T O R Y 1 8 9 2-1 9 8 9 >-> ; c > PROLOGUE Ths Bref Hstory of Meacham Park ends n 1989. Snce that tme there have been many changes, both n the lves of resdents and former

More information

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN

Israel Journal of Entomology ISRAEL JOURNAL OF ENTOMOLOGY. Vol , Printed in Israel ISSN Edtor s message A new speces of Raglus Stål (Heteroptera: Rhyparochromdae) from Israel A. Nr 1 The Dctyophardae (Homoptera: Ccadna: Fulgorodea) of Israel A.F. Emeljanov, T. Stern, and A. Fredberg 7 The

More information

OF FREE "/ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES

OF FREE /ILL BAPTISTS. FIFTY- FIFTH ANNUAL MINUTES -------- FRST ARZONA DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE "/LL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL MNUTES 2006-2007 - - - FRST ARZONA - - DSTRCT ASSOCATON OF FREE WLL BAPTSTS FFTY- FFTH ANNUAL TES 2006-2007 \ - - : : -! - -

More information

Corpus Christi University Parish

Corpus Christi University Parish Corpus Chrst Unversty Parsh Rev. Msgr. Mchael R. Bllan, VF, Pastor mbllan@ccup.org Lauren Farrell, Campus Mnstry Assocate lfarrell@ccup.org Deacon Robert Fedynch, Bookkeeper rfedynch@ccup.org Susette Malak-McNutt,

More information

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh

Section-A (Reading) Bhagat Singh SAMPLE PAPER TERM I SESSION- 2017-18 ENGLISH CLASS- VII Tme allowed: 3 hrs Maxmum Marks: 80 Ths paper s dvded nto three sectons: Secton A (Readng) - 20 marks Secton B (Wrtng - 20 marks Grammar) - 10 marks

More information

Demnocratse Reublicans, and Wae ea

Demnocratse Reublicans, and Wae ea 0116. l^ PrdNtMne /^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ uhskm VOLUME 17 NUMBER 72 STONY BROOKF N.Y. FRDAY, APRL 19, 1974 Dstrbuted free of charge throughout campus and communty every Monday, Wednesday, and

More information

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956

Kenyon Collegian - October 13, 1956 Dgtal Kenyon: Research, Scholarshp, and Creatve Exchange The Kenyon Collegan Archves 0-3-956 Kenyon Collegan - October 3, 956 Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtal.kenyon.edu/collegan Recommended

More information

New -Concept In Constitution

New -Concept In Constitution A DORSTYs ROBBNS WN HE STONY BROOK # SOUNDNGS LT. CONTEST Ad L one Eutors t ot go J A c bounangs are pleased to announce the wnners' of tfe frst Annual Lterary Contest. George Dorsty, '69, was the recpent

More information

air will make their nests in it.

air will make their nests in it. 355 "THE FOURTH DIMENSION AND ITS USES BY MAN" By Charles Fllmore Unty Tranng School July 31, 1933 Lesgon l "How Sprtually to Qucken Man' 8 Supermnd Facultes and Use,"Them In Character Buldng" ' The am

More information

Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Public Employees on Democratic^ Republican Approaches to Problems of Civil Service

Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Public Employees on Democratic^ Republican Approaches to Problems of Civil Service tj n Amercans Largest Weekly for Publc Employees Vol. XV I No. Tesflav, October 12, 19.4 Prce Ten Cenls e Queres See Page 2 Roosevelt^ McGovern to Address Publc Employees on Democratc^ Republcan Approaches

More information

COUNCIL MINUTES February 4, 1974

COUNCIL MINUTES February 4, 1974 39 1 COUNCL MNUTES February 4, 1974 Regular meetng of the Cty Councl of the Cty of Ocean Shores called to order at 730 P.M. by Mayor Lews wth all councl members present. Cty Manager Ford, Cty Attorney

More information

Photo by John Branson. [f No Action on Com plaints

Photo by John Branson. [f No Action on Com plaints Walker, Protest Bll Hghlght Senate Walker Crtczes ] - 1No y ote on p0j cy easure; State Budget Plan mmm mummmmbbb amb Serate Terms Bll 'Vague' Unversty Presdent Erc A. Walker dsclosed yesterday that a

More information

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY

an imprint of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY an mprnt of Prometheus Books Amherst, NY Publshed 2012 by Pyr, an mprnt of Prometheus Books A Gule of Dragons. Copyrght 2012 James Enge. All rghts reserved. No part of ths publcaton may be reproduced,

More information

Cedars, March 6, 1986

Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle Unversty DgtalCommons@Cedarvlle Cedars 3-6-1986 Cedars, March 6, 1986 Cedarvlle College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.cedarvlle.edu/cedars Part of the Journalsm Studes

More information

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives

SALEM-WITCH-L Archives 1 of 5 2009 09 19 01:16 Welcome to RootsWeb.com Sgn n DISCOVER MORE > Home Searches Famly Trees Malng Lsts Message Boards Web Stes Passwords Help Archver > SALEM WITCH > 1999 08 > 0933867296 SALEM-WITCH-L

More information

Extension of the Upper Extremity with Shoulder Movements

Extension of the Upper Extremity with Shoulder Movements Internatonal Journal of Mechancal Engneerng and Robotcs Research Vol. 4, No. 3, July 5 Extenson of the Upper Extremty wth Shoulder Movements Nobuak Nakazawa and oshkazu Matsu Dvson of Mechancal Scence

More information

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m.

Winged Lion THE. 4th Annual Book Sale. Women s Guild Fundraiser. St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church. October 11th, 12th and 13th 9 a.m. 7 p.m. OUR MISSION STATEMENT TO SPREAD THE GOOD NEWS OF JESUS CHRIST TO ALL GOD S PEOPLE BY WORD AND ACTION. 02 WEEKLY SPANISH MASS AT ST. MARKS STARTING OCT 5TH 03 SEVEN SECRETS OF SUCCESSFUL STEWARDS 05 HIGH

More information

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics

When Os Good By T. B. Maston A retired professor of Chrisuan Ethics Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 When C@mprr@mose Os Good By T. B. Maston A retred professor of Chrsuan Ethcs There may come a tme, for

More information

SUMMIT. Overtook garage Construction Hit

SUMMIT. Overtook garage Construction Hit Summt Herald Opens 29th Annual Camp Fund Drve The 29* annual Summt Herald Fresh Ar Fund drve for needy local chldren opened today wth ntal contrbutons totallng $700. Last year donatons to the fund reached

More information

Meal Plan To Be Optional

Meal Plan To Be Optional : VOLUME 4 NUMBER 33 STONY BROOK, N.Y. TUESDAY, MARCH., 97 _tonv At ostcage Pad PB.lL h Ne. York Meal Plan To Be Optonal By CHRS CARTY The housng offce announced yesterday the approval of an amendment

More information

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979

GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 CONFERENCE PUBLCTY Frst of Seres GENERAL CONFERENCE AUGUST 1979 510 Watchung Ave. Box 868 Planfeld N.J. 07061 (lssn 0036-214X) Second class postage pad at Planfeld N.J. 07061 THE SABBATH SEVENTH DAY BAPTST

More information

services at Ritenour. "Several stu- comments about treatment; however, when asked to elaborate, the y

services at Ritenour. Several stu- comments about treatment; however, when asked to elaborate, the y S from the assocated press» K News Roundup: From the State, H Naton b World for Rtenour Patents 8 r \ The World Vetnam Ground War Casualty Statstcs Rse SAGON Casualty statstcs from battle acton s year

More information

Board of Trustees Meeting Minutes

Board of Trustees Meeting Minutes Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU Board of Trustees Meetng Mnutes Unversty Publcatons 12-6-1915 Board of Trustees Meetng Mnutes 1915-12-06 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-23-1939 The Wellesley News (11-23-1939) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

When reached for comment regarding his dismissal, Baxter replied only that, "I

When reached for comment regarding his dismissal, Baxter replied only that, I Secr Head Bows'After'Racal Slw r By Rchard Bourbeau John Baxter, former asnstant drector of Publc Safety for East Campus, was dsmssed from hs poston durng ntersesson for alledly amng racal remarks at a

More information

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp

MINUTES. Seventy Seventh Annual Session. Arkansas State Association. Free Will Baptists. At The. Free Will Baptist Youth Camp ...., [.., :,... MNUTES Of The Seventy Seventh Annual Sesson Of The Arkansas State Assocaton t,,,,,,. j,. of Free Wll Baptsts At The Free Wll Baptst Youth Camp - On Beaver Lake-Conway, Arkansas August

More information

wh en your numoers b up

wh en your numoers b up fe 5th Year, No. 0 Clnton County grew 30 pet. n last decade Prelmnary census fgures for o Clnton County were released * last week ctng a 30. per cent populaton Increase from the 90 offcal census. The 970

More information

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043,

\ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, \ rf/7 EVANS, W. A..43HRD INTERVIEW 5043, 373 FOR\* 374 Indat- T \';"..c >fjl. - TTlRD INTERVIEW 5043. Feld porker's Ths report wad'? on (ta^" February 1, I.)3 7. *V' ~" * "" "" "" 1.. Name JL!^-?!!! 1^^

More information

Photo courtesy «The centra cany Timet. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther Kin f : To Deny Violence Its Victory

Photo courtesy «The centra cany Timet. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther Kin f : To Deny Violence Its Victory Rotng Spreads To Dozen Ctes 3 By The Assocated Press Racal volence struck more than a dozen US ctes yesterday wth the worst burnng and lootng n the natons captal and Chcago, an angry aftermath to the slayng

More information

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london.

OCTOBER 2, Mrfit.ar:hv, london. o Retanng \ Through Walkng n the Lght." The text s 1 John 1: 5-10. The. Assocaton Camp Commttee has been requested to meet mmedately after dsmssal of "the.afternoon servce. Mrs. Delmer E. Van Horn, Correspondng

More information

History of the Pequot War

History of the Pequot War I!n 1636 there was unrest and suspcon between the Englsh Colonsts n New England and the Natve Amercan People who had lved there snce tme beyond memory. Each group was worred about the ntentons of the other.!

More information

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929

The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty DgtalCommons@USU Utah State Magazne Utah State Unversty Specal Collectons and Archves 11-1929 The Utah State Quarterly, Vol. 6 No. 2, November 1929 Utah State Unversty Follow ths and

More information

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16)

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 16) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 978 -- 980 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper Fall 2-8-978 2-08-978 (The Journal Champon Volume, ssue 6) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_78_80

More information

WORLD HERITAGE CONVENTION ACT, 1999

WORLD HERITAGE CONVENTION ACT, 1999 10 NO.31832 GOVERNMENT GAZETTE. 30 JANUARY 2009 No. 72 30.January 2009 WORLD HERTAGE CONVENTON ACT, 1999 PROCLAMATON OF THE CAPE FLORAL REGON PROTECTED AREAS AS A WORLD HERTAGE STE AND DELEGATON BY THE

More information

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It "The Stick of Ephraim" j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF

i = ! i t BOOK OF MORMON J i Is It The Stick of Ephraim j i Referred to in the Thirty-seventh Chapter of i BY ELDER JOSEPH LUFF +~-llll_.lltl-t--1!11-h-1111-fl-ltl!-lll-h-k~--1111-hu-uh--tt-~-~~-m--1111-l!-llll-l+ ~ : THE ~ f! t BOOK OF MORMON J s t "The Stck of Ephram" j Referred to n the Thrty-seventh Chapter of EzekeL, Verses

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-29-1945 The Wellesley News (11-29-1945) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on "The Blood of the Nation." TWO O'CLOCK TODAY.

SECOND CONVOCATION AT HUNTINGTON HALL Pres. Jordan of Leland Stanford to Speak on The Blood of the Nation. TWO O'CLOCK TODAY. - ;. ': : r1 TE0Ct-H VO,. XXX. NO. 43 BOSTON, MASS., FRDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1910 PRCE TWO CENTS MADERO SAYS HE S PRESDENT OF MEXCO COURSES N FRESHMAN MLTARY SCENCE ARE N FULL SWNG Toneon Reported Captured

More information

nf rteamnte excesses GA faces gay mixer issue Impersonator cons frats Campus Panel invited to air unrest findings

nf rteamnte excesses GA faces gay mixer issue Impersonator cons frats Campus Panel invited to air unrest findings --- ~-e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cousn Bruce for "Contnuous News Servce Snce 1881." MacGregor Freshman Councl Presdent [ By ee Gguere The General Assembly's specal commttee on the gay mxer, whle stressng the hghly

More information

(The Liberty Champion, Volume 7, Issue 8)

(The Liberty Champion, Volume 7, Issue 8) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 1989 -- 1990 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper 10-25-1989 10-25-89 (The Lberty Champon, Volume 7, ssue 8) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_89_90

More information

The U.A.C. Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929

The U.A.C. Alumni Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929 Utah State Unversty DgtalCommons@USU Utah State Magazne Utah State Unversty Specal Collectons and Archves 3-1929 The U.A.C. Alumn Quarterly, Vol. 5 No. 3, March 1929 Utah State Unversty Follow ths and

More information

RAHWAY. HhrtN. New Jersev's oldest week y newspaper Established 1822

RAHWAY. HhrtN. New Jersev's oldest week y newspaper Established 1822 HhrtN m 'J. 7:..'3 5 New Jersev's oldest week y newspaper Establshed 8 Vol. 44, No. 54 Rahway, N.J., Thursday, May 8, 967 locen- EXAMNNG NEW LAUNDRY EQUPMENT at John E. Runnells Hosptal for Chest Dseases

More information

Weihan Wang* Beijing Yuanda International Project Management Consulting Co. Ltd., Beijing , China *Corresponding author

Weihan Wang* Beijing Yuanda International Project Management Consulting Co. Ltd., Beijing , China *Corresponding author Rev. Téc. Ing. Unv. Zula. Vol. 39, Nº 11, 166-173, 2016 do:10.21311/001.39.11.21 RFID Postonng Based on Vehcle Postonng Subsystem Wehan Wang* Beng Yuanda Internatonal Proect Management Consultng Co. Ltd.,

More information

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN'

JULY 23 GETTING CLOSER -TIME'S A WASTIN' TH VOLUME XVII HUMBER 5 THE NINTH INFANTRY DIVISION ASSOCIATION $4.00 per year. (Ths $4 per year subscrpton also pays one year's dues.) Sngle copy, 35c. Columbus, Oho - 286 Zmpfer St., Columbus, Oho -

More information

THE WESTFIELD LEADER THE LEADING AND MOST WIDELY CIRCULATED WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN UNION COUNTY

THE WESTFIELD LEADER THE LEADING AND MOST WIDELY CIRCULATED WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN UNION COUNTY .\ PUBLIC 425 E.BROAD ST. WE5TrELB.l. ADV. THE WESTFIELD LEADER THE LEADING AND MOST WIDELY CIRCULATED WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN UNION COUNTY FREE PARKING EVERY NIGHT SEVENTY-SEVENTH YEAR No. 29 Second C3)as8

More information

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 21)

(The Journal Champion Volume 1, Issue 21) Lberty Unversty DgtalCommons@Lberty Unversty 1978 -- 1980 Lberty Unversty School Newspaper Sprng 2-23-1979 02-23-1979 (The Journal Champon Volume 1, ssue 21) Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://dgtalcommons.lberty.edu/paper_78_80

More information

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was!" Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass

Wye flerhnratt Publlhed '09! b! the students ( the North Engneerng. Carolna State College of Agrculture was! Member North Carolna Collegate Press Ass .1",_r s r Gratutes 'Vol. V, No. 12 Publshed Weekly by the Students of N. 0. State College of Agrculture Engneerng J) ṗ STATE COLLEGE STATON, RALEGH, N. C., DECEMBER 5,1924 Sngle Copes 10 Cents - ~. r...

More information

mouth and it will be shall speak

mouth and it will be shall speak Katabasiae Ode 1 I shall o - pen my 19 mouth and it will be filled with the Spir - it, and I shall speak forth to the Queen Moth - er. I shall be seen joy - ful - ly sing - ing her prais - es, and I shall

More information

THE WESTFIELD LEADER

THE WESTFIELD LEADER THE WESTFELD LEADER Tk* UmdUg m Matt WUdy Crrmlmud WmUy Nempmpt f» tnlon County School Bomrd Meet* Tuesday 8 PM. EGHTY-THRD YEAR No. 16 ec

More information

Printing of U-grad Bulletins Delayed

Printing of U-grad Bulletins Delayed ******* > \- ^ W r9 foun(w 885 N. Vets Agree To More Talks Wth Kssnger B> Unted Press lateraatoaal North Vetnam compled today wth Presdent Nxon's demands for more secret Vetnam peace blks and dspatched

More information

It was Kissinger who destroyed the nation of Lebanon

It was Kissinger who destroyed the nation of Lebanon Clck here for Full ssue of ER Volume 17, Number 44, November 16, 1990 Tll Feature t was Kssnger who destroyed the naton of Lebanon by Bassam El Hashem Bassam El Hashem s a professor at the Socal Scence

More information

Penh State 's Flower Power

Penh State 's Flower Power 'Say that was a Drum Majo r for Freedom ' ATLANTA, Ga. (ff) The Rev. Dr. Martn Luther Kng Jr.'s admrers by the legons pad ther last respects to hs memory yesterday at ceremones n hs own smple church, flled

More information

THE WESTFIELD LEADER T*«LenUnf and Mot Widely Circulated Weekly Naupaper In Union County

THE WESTFIELD LEADER T*«LenUnf and Mot Widely Circulated Weekly Naupaper In Union County %»USlJlC LBRAR OTT^ THE WESTFELD LEADER T*«LenUnf and Mot Wdely Crculated Weekly Naupaper n Unon County Town Councl Meett Tuesday At 8;30 P.M. HGHTY-SBCOND YEAR No. 37 'Rce Bowl 9 Permt Dened Protesters

More information

CHURCH UNION DIALOGUE IN THE COME-OUTER TRADITION: WESLEYAN METHODISTS AND METHODIST PROTESTANTS \; WILLIAM H. BRACKNEY

CHURCH UNION DIALOGUE IN THE COME-OUTER TRADITION: WESLEYAN METHODISTS AND METHODIST PROTESTANTS \; WILLIAM H. BRACKNEY Methodst Hstory, 24:2 (January 1986) CHURCH UNON DALOGUE N THE COME-OUTER TRADTON: WESLEYAN METHODSTS AND METHODST PROTESTANTS \; 1858-1867 WLLAM H BRACKNEY ;,: ~ ~ : " ~!~ :t~ ~!fl;,,tjf ~ lj[ :J ~ }5:"

More information

A journal of Catholic life in Ohio

A journal of Catholic life in Ohio C A T H O L I C DIOCESE OF COLUMBUS A journal of Catholc lfe n Oho JULY 18, 2010 THE 16 TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME VOLUME 59:37 WWW.CTONLINE.ORG ST. JOSEPH PARISH NURTURES THE FAITH IN THE DOVER AREA 2

More information

Official Cipher of the

Official Cipher of the No: Official Cipher of the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Ancient Free & Accepted Masons of the State of Maine Not to be consulted in any Lodge or exemplification while in session. (By participating officers.)

More information

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of

The Sabbath Reeorder. A Special Emphasis Issue of '- The Sabbath Recorder 510 Watchung Ave., Box 868 Planfeld, N. J. 07061 Second class postage pad at Planfeld, N. J. 07061 "WHERE THERE S NO VSON THE PEOPLE PERSH" N. THE fnterest OF SEVENTH DAT BAPTST

More information

RAH'-AY YV.ZZ PU2L1Z Ll- Ii75 ST. GEOftCEO AVE. RAHBAY, H 4 J

RAH'-AY YV.ZZ PU2L1Z Ll- Ii75 ST. GEOftCEO AVE. RAHBAY, H 4 J RAH'-AY YV.ZZ PU2LZ Ll- 75 ST. GEOftCEO AVE. RAHBAY, H 4 J. 07065 ^ PUBUC RAHWAV, N J V- New Jersey's Oldest Weekly Newspaper Establshed 822 VOL. 62 NO. 49, NEW JERSEY. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 984 USPS 454-60

More information

A dorm evaluation which will be conducted in all girls dorms Feb. 25 could result in some drastic rule changes, according to Sara Smith, speaker of

A dorm evaluation which will be conducted in all girls dorms Feb. 25 could result in some drastic rule changes, according to Sara Smith, speaker of Mddle Tennessee State Unversty SIDELINES Vol. 43 No. 38 Murfreesboro, Tennessee 37130 Thursdoy, Feb. 19, 1970 House, Senate To Vew Jane Kerr, Knoxvlle junor, smles as she gves a pnt of blood durng the

More information

The BG News June 19, 1996

The BG News June 19, 1996 Bowlng Green State Unversty ScholarWorks@BGSU BGSU Student Newspaper Unversty Publcatons 6-19-1996 The BG News June 19, 1996 Bowlng Green State Unversty Follow ths and addtonal works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news

More information

26 Pages May 9, A *S(; Johns woman, Kathryn Marie Barker S Mead St, is listed in

26 Pages May 9, A *S(; Johns woman, Kathryn Marie Barker S Mead St, is listed in k- Clnton County News Sshomq^hsL ClnM^buvSnaL 1856 ST JOHNS, MCHGAN 48879 117th Year Vol. 1 26 Pages May 9, 1973 15 Cents Weekend wreck clams 10th 1973 vctm. DEWTTTWP--Anotherfatal(ywas recorded n Clnton

More information

THE CULVER CITIZEN ON LAKE MAXINKUCKEE INDIANA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LAKE

THE CULVER CITIZEN ON LAKE MAXINKUCKEE INDIANA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LAKE Marshall Co. Hstorcal Socety 5 test Garro St, Plymouth, Xrtd. Monthly "FARM and HOME" Secton Wth Ths Week's Edton THE CULVER CTZEN ON LAKE MAXNKUCKEE NDANA'S MOST BEAUTFUL LAKE 67TH YEAR, NO. 5 CULVER,

More information

The Wellesley News ( )

The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves 11-21-1929 The Wellesley News (11-21-1929) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: http://repostory.wellesley.edu/news

More information