Foge ;Ix i N Ml(-Hl(j^N DAILY f~ag ~ixif-i MKHI~jN DALY uisday, Aoril101, 11977 r I mm U w I PI o ancoue Mi nority services disjointed -.-_-- 1- ' , 1-1/ I~ Yo~risconttintuedTetok ai e worth real Motley! It Id o Ulrich's WITH your currently good ones. 1011 1 IT EA-FGUE 1 OUi Urich's ells yo ur discontinued books to (! ~d Irom NJa, t41 what sal,-guards they\wanted ill the event a prora m he were cenrolled iii ,.:,, phasedouT.N One a'skedstdens ortheir tionl.Nooneaskd suets to partiiate in the eno-a- Igz 1 L s 11ndk as 1 d i )7 >ofrh P ui r1ir closur poliy \~ re shttled back and fo rt,;h beteen ~the ad- j ninisti ative and faculty bodies; that ,nutured it, much of the de-1 bate focused on what makes a program a "qualit y" pr ogram.I For the proposal states: "cri- teria fQr deterrmnig whether a p rgrairi should be eliminated! ough-t to pllace the ,rcafest en)- phas is othe quac (tlity, of the pro- gram rlinv olve.'' B3UT IN THI) Fu Lttle attonitt to define quality, the policy- makers did not ask students- whose career aspi; ration could' qite likely be damaged by 1) the closing of their pro,-,ram -for, their concept of quahity, And it would have been in everybody's A 4 (ontinued from Page 4) from all, minority counselingf i~ w ayagree that it is due, in part services. However, no action has to the frustrating complexity of been initiated to form any such minority services. A student1 group. best interest to ask students' must confront many offices andI UNIVERSITY officials acknowi- what they were looking for in ant long lines before he or she can: edge the need for a better co- educjation -- and whether they receive any assistance. ;ordination of these services and foundI t here. The July, 1976 "Report of the deplore the absence of a plan- Muc tie ad efor wet ~ University Task Force on Stu- ning body. toa. the pro disfotnt inc dent Counseling "evaluated mi- DavidRoisnassttdi and concudedsofstatdi- p )licy's developrfrent. The Uni-I nority servicesan colue rector o admissionssted"I versity needed to establish pro- that the many organizations feel very strongly that we need c edures for handling a messy "provide a variety of comple-,a a more centralized coordinating task. m-entary and indeed overlapping body to coordinate these ser- services. vices. They all try to have their Yet, xhen the fiinl draft w~as The Report recommended the own thrust and it is enough to~ presentued to the Regents, itj creation of a planning body to confuse the student. It is im-: was pr efaced with "this docu-; be called the Minority Academic portant that the student feel JmWen,. has now had substantialI Counseling Coordinating Coin- wanted and not fall into the campus wide review ... "Sub-! mittee to coordinate the agen- regimentation. Students get stantial campus wide review"' cies into a wide academic sup- caught up in bureaucracy and and the administration some- port service. The group would' feel lost, bewildered and help- how missed the students. be comprised of represeiititives less." Vice-President of S t u d4 e n t Services Henry Johnson says, "I'm concerned about 'both the a c a d e mn i s and rion-acadomiic causes of the high attrition frate.... We need to reassesses $University efforts and get a bait- Mle on changing needs of our students." However acknowledging the problem is not enoaugh. A very careful study of the iindity situation in all respects is sor ly needed. But in review, minority activ- ities need to be reassessed, with~ some action started for .the cre- ation of a coordinatitug body for minority services. This year, only the two issues of" minority attrition and, minority rbcriuit- ment seemed to cry$ out for at- tention. over 600 college bookstores. This way we get th e highest possible prices for YU. anoter Ulrich's service- C1E;0 fightis for life Recount begins: iincl f'rnm Psaiyo 11 I AFSC'M E members. Since most GSA's do not have3 families to support and are only at the University for a limited inmber of years, they are not U I MPURN L9 Ouj rcordv - and tapes are uneconditionall y uarainteed. It "you-,re nt _satisfied, we will maike it good ... People_ :min:: " ^.r;R-' ''r .; committed to demanding a bet- ter contract, or a contract at all for that matter, They came here to get a degree with teach- ing as a sideline used mostly' a sa source of income. They have no desire to be junior. George Meany's. GEO leaders have tended to overdramatize! their desires The foctus should,, be on sur- vival. GEO's leaders should 'stop acting, without thinking. They s h o u 1 d reorganize the' union and build up its strength so that when a direct threat comes from the University, GEO will still be around to effectively face up to it. I B elcher optimistic )1\ I Ir ~Q11 Ina jyL(- B~ubeck Quartet JIM HALE. -1MMITMLN I People who work here are into the different forms that jazz takes, and we're very proud of our selection. Come in soon and browse-you're bound to find something new, And if you re not looking for anything in particu- lar, wec can suggest a couple of records or tapes that will! fit into your collection, PRICES GOOD I HOSAT._ ANZIL 30 540 E. L BERTY-LIBERTY CENTRE 662-5623JL of.iime~r Ofl t.it,.. y and MaynarlUd) ALOV URGLkIN()4C Mon.-Thar. 10- 0; Fri. & Sot. 10-12 Midnight; Sunday 12-6 (Continued from Page 1) "The Republicans= didn't put any reasons in their petition be-1 cause they're just fishing totally in the dark. They think the odds are they'll pick up a vote some- where along the way," he said. BELCHER, who has expressed optimism about the recount from the very beginning, said "I think we have just as good a chance of winning as they do." The board estimates it will THE SAGA OFAN ELEGANT GYPSY- AL DiMEOLA spend two days reviewing the voting machines, a few of which are locked u~p in elementary schools around the. city, Aid the rest of which are in a h~nsar at the city airport. After that, board members plan to spe nd one day going over the absentee vote tallies at City Hall. 1 "It really depends on how much time they (Board mpem- hers) spend arguing," said Beals, "but they should have the results by Friday at the latest." There are some musicians whose careers are extraordinary Al DiMeola is one of them. At 18, he was a student at the Berklee School of Music in Boston. A year and a half later he was the guitar mainstay of Return to Forever. Last year, Al surprised everyone with 'Land of the Midnight Sun;' an album which excited jazz and rock audiences alike.' Now Al gives us"'Elegant Gypsy" which has a Spanish flavor clue in part to his collaboration with Paco de Lucia, one of Spain's premier flamenco guitar- ists. With"Elegant Gypsy," Al's fiery guitar inventions are more powerful than ever. A . ato Barbio ri callentc 'Elegant Gypsy" from the extraordinary Al DiMeola. On Columbia Records and Tapes. Chuck Moniofle moil, squevzo Mc4 Lewis Met Lewis and frends ~h ~1 Gettry t.iewood And Tirn4; Piece x e RF y, ".a i30 GS St te- -665-36 9 David L ~n ~123 S. University--668-9866 r ,L q.ht' n up, Ploosc, ' t0C~U BE IV Ut . t tt~~-~> o t.it. "~. i 12-6 lu Do Cury The Paul Desmond Quartet __ _- , . - --- --_-._.- e.,c--------.'we.-- -- ,. a ~m,,- ,- ---,.,. r:w-s "vw-- I,~- - .,w+esmus (f* Available at your favorite record store The Cellar- feuatures the p ro-,tection detaIls Th le HPjoo55 programmable scientific pocket calculator from Hewlett-pPackard- ONLY $2 Iusall this high-perf'ormance capability ill your pocke: 49-Ste p User iMenor> \Yon canl program the iiP-55 } our sel to ScOi\ I _ our irepetitivye Iprohil ii n in utra >: X Iithout softwv~arc. Nit hon u rox r. -- Full Editing CapabilitN ou cat' iii :, pY r pes -any program step annlitune. SBranching and Conditional 'I et tapaln - i its,. The II -55 perior iisdir c'Jhri_ i -k "r conditijonal te5s s ased nl i 1 e; 1 86-Pre-programyrimd I unctioris aiim Operations. Lxparidcd !trig and st .capabilities. [rue metri Kcon .1it - - capability. More prc-progmrrrrek! furnctionis thani any otherp c C( ~jI20-Addressable Meutior ti ;.;re i Registers. You - in doigv> -Digital Tinier. A unique teatre .: ' ~~~~~~~~~the 100-h our iir inicaswr- n ~nielh, C' o .!, r esIi to\tcn " plits"' iii i1t ime I 2Ail- )riHp's eft-iit RI's lgi ssmm r wAith 4-' vinrR 'Stck- .11Ou1o~e, o problenis one was.y rJ 1IciiiLt strokes. time and chunces Ifo rr ii --.-~~~~~ NIP quality rfsmuii.rn.re-i _ Nobel auireates, astronuris ronQIreri r FREE $20VALUE WITH APRI 1-,_jMAY3 t) ;l ]t i~i lt I ->20 ~~~~~~~ tsi ~tc~ xr L i ll :'L , tre.lit' n- ..ugnrvd): Spring lerm Course Offerings Department of Journali1sm (0201 SOCIAL ROLE OF THE MASS MEDIA) (4 cr) Open to freshmen. Survey of the structure of the communication industries and analysis of their effct on society. (J202 FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION) (4 cr) Open to freshmen. Historical survey of English and American guarantees of free expres- sion and study of definitions of free expression today, (J342 WRITING FOR MASS MEDIA) (4 cr) J301 preq. Continuation of .3301, giving regular exposure to professional writ- ing conditions and advance writing techniques. (J403 MEDIA PERFORMANCE) (4 cr) J302 preq. Analysis of media news coverage on selected national and inter- national topics. (J406 MASS COMMUNICATION RESEARCH) (4 cr) Junior standing. Examination of relevant social science research literature to help determine the role of mass media in society. (J501 JOURNALISM TUTORIAL) Journalism students. (1-4 cr ) I - 1 C L l I