| Looking Forward |
by Louis T. Benezet
President, SUNYA
In the fall term of 1972 SUNY Albany begins its second decade as a University
Center. Nothing could be more out of focus, however, than to say that we are where
Harvard was in 1646. Harvard until the late 19th century was an academy attended by
boys mostly of high school age; Henry Adams of the distinguished presidential family
considered its intellectual contribution in the mid 1800's to be trifling.
State University at Albany has moved in a decade from a high-grade liberal arts
college for teachers to a university with eight professional schools which offers doc-
toral programs in 32 fields and a broad range of research into areas from abstract
mathematics to applied urban studies. Its student body and faculty reflect a certain
no-nonsense attitude toward higher learning.
In May 1972 the University Center at Albany conferred 1985 baccalaureate, 1326
master’s, and 87 doctoral degrees. We now award more degrees each year than the
number of the entire student body in our pre-University Center days.
A university does not win its case by the numbers game. It is what we can do for
people—one person at a time—that decides the quality of output.
Three developments at SUNYA draw my special interest as we begin the year of
1972-73. One is the interdisciplinary major. After a year of committee discussions
involving both faculty and students, SUNYA begins this fall with a framework for
interdisciplinary majors to be worked out by students with faculty guidance. The
development reflects a desire of many students to approach scientific and social prob-
lems broadly rather than to be confined to one discipline. Single-discipline majors will
continue to predominate but the interdisciplinary major can give us new avenues to
innovative learning. Environmental studies, on which we have worked for more than
two years, will start in earnest this fall with a program director and a second field
offering as well as a broad list of associated courses and two core courses.
Second, our systems of governance after two years of attention by a commission
chaired by Professor Martin Edelman will see a new structure of councils with explicit
assignments and strengthened personnel. The Educational Policies Council with
increased student participation should move into the consideration of the university’s
pressing priority problems. The new University Community Council has the opportu-
nity to draw together our common concerns among students, faculty, non-teaching
professionals, and classified employees. “Collegiality” is a two-dollar word for the idea
that a university still makes sense to the extent that it brings together the purposes of
all who work and study here.
Third, I predict that this will be a year when such a place as ours will search out
the meaning of words like “research” and “advanced learning.” To some, such words
have become symbols of a luxury which the taxpayer should no longer support, now
that we have beaten the Russians to the moon. For others they are the very reason for
the existence of a university as distinct from a college. Research and advanced learning
need not confine themselves to graduate studies, important though they are to the
future of knowledge. I see them as words to describe a certain passion to know things
as fully as one can know them. To be part of a real university can mean as much to the
freshman as to the graduate student. First, however, we must do a better job of
defining our terms. Then we should demonstrate, by quality of work and by concern
for the public’s understanding, how important it is that SUN YA continue to mature as
a University Center in every fulfillment of that word.
Academic Administrators Change,
Shifts Made in Personnel Office
Several changes affecting schools,
academic departments, and administrative
offices have been announced. William K.
Holstein, formerly of the Harvard Univer-
sity faculty, is serving as acting dean of
the School of Business. Melvin K. Bers is
the new associate dean in the Division of
Social and Behavioral Sciences in the Col-
Sayles House
The Sayles International House on
the downtown campus has opened its
doors to more than 100 students; both
undergraduate and graduate, foreign and
American. On an experimental basis, the
program is designed to promote intercul-
tural understanding, communication, and
education. Another goal is involvement
with the community in an effort to
strengthen existing relations and to estab-
lish new ones.
Ruth Fordon, director of Sayles
International House, indicates there is a
need for donations to complement exist-
ing facilities, particularly those for cook-
ing. Also being sought are library books,
international games, and items for
lounges and study rooms.
Anyone interested in assisting with
the program or donations is advised to
call Ms. Fordon at the International Stu-
dent Office, CC 332, or at 457-8383.
lege of Arts and Sciences and Maureen
Didier has assumed new duties as asso-
ciate dean of the School of Social Wel-
fare.
New department chairmen include
Frederick H. Truscott, biological sciences;
Joseph Testo, educational administration;
Paul C. Boomsliter, speech pathology and
audiology; and George Putman, geological
sciences.
Elmer Mathews has joined the office
staff of Vice President for Management
and Planning John W. Hartley as assistant
to Mr. Hartley to handle administrative
staff work, particularly in the areas of
collective bargaining and administrative
procedures.
Leon Calhoun succeeds Dr. Mathews
as director of personnel. He has been di-
rector of management information sys-
tems. The Equal Employment Opportu-
nity program has been transferred into
the Personnel Department and will con-
tinue to be under the direction of Mr.
Calhoun. He reports to Robert Stierer,
assistant vice president for business
management.
Patricia Fisher has been transferred
into the management analysis unit headed
by Edmund Klee, thus combining the
functions of management analysis and
management information systems. The
management analysis unit continues to
report to John Hartigan, assistant vice
president for controller.
Nicholas M. DeLuca has been ap-
pointed principal of The Milne School.
He succeeds Theodore H. Fossieck who
retired.
Dr. DeLuca since 1970 has been as-
sistant ctor for Redesign of the Cap-
ital District Regional Supplementary Edu-
cation Center, a planning and develop-
ment agency serving 102 public schools
and 127 non-public schools. His work has
focused primarily on assisting school per-
sonnel to plan and implement instruc-
tional and management processes.
The new principal has degrees from
Columbia University and SUNYA where
he received a Doctor of Education in edu-
cational administration.
Mohawk Tower
Houses Offices
The departments of economics, soci-
ology, and foundations of education
moved their offices into the Mohawk
Tower on Indian Quad, relieving the pres-
sures of overcrowding in the Social
Sciences and Education buildings. They
are occupying the first of some 220 of-
fices that will be available when rewiring
and installation of new lighting is com-
pleted.
The tower was designed originally as
a student residence, but the number of
students living on campus has declined
and the space will not be needed. The
university is renting the tower from the
New York State Dormitory Authority.
The tower will have a social science
orientation when it is fully completed.
The School of Criminal Justice is slated
to move from its space in the library base-
ment in January, and the Graduate
School of Public Affairs and the School
of Social Welfare will move from Draper
next summer.
No classes will be held in the tower,
although there will be about ten rooms
which could be used for graduate semi-
nars. In addition, the lounge areas on the
top floor will be available for department
meetings, seminars, and special programs.
Departments currently are discussing the
possibilities of making joint use of faculty
and space for research.
Another move has seen the College
of General Studies go from the Adminis-
tration Building to the first floor of
Draper Hall. An increasing number of
general studies classes will be held in
Draper, as the building is more accessible
to the part-time student community the
college serves. The graduate admissions
office of the College of Arts and Sciences
has moved from the Social Sciences
Building to space vacated by general
studies.
When the two graduate schools move
from Draper next summer, that space will
be assumed for classes and offices of the
new James E. Allen, Jr., Collegiate Cen-
ter, which will have all its facilities in Bru-
bacher Hall on Alumni Quad this year.
Special clinics and centers now in Husted
and Richardson halls will remain there.
Students Face
Loan Delays
Chancellor Boyer, in recognition of
the financial problems faced by students
as a result of changed federal legislation
regarding loans, has notified the various
units of SUNY that students may be
granted deferral of payment on fall
semester bills until loans in process can be
resolved.
SUNYA students must contact the
Bursar regarding payment of their fall
bills and any deferrals to be granted.
Award letters from the Office of Finan-
cial Aids represent evidence of award for
purposes of deferring against National
Defense Loans and Educational Opportu-
nity Grants.
Origins of the current uncertainties
are complex. On Aug. 19 President Nixon
signed a bill abolishing measures imposed
on Federally Guaranteed Loans
(NYHEAC loans in New York) by the
Higher Education Amendments of 1972,
implemented July 1. From July 1 to Aug.
19 colleges were required to use a stand-
ard financial need analysis system to
determine family eligibility for NYHEAC
loans, resulting in many families being
denied the aid. Prior to July 1 families
whose adjusted gross income did not
exceed $15,000 were eligible; with the
Aug. 19 legislation, NYHEAC loans again
will be granted on the $15,000 adjusted
income criterion.
The changes in legislation have pro-
duced critical delays in the processing of
loans. As a result, many students will not
have received notice of final action on
their NYHEAC loans by fall registration.
Additionally, late Congressional
action resulted in failure of the Appropri-
ations Committee to act on funding for
the National Defense Student Loan Pro-
gram. Consequently, students who have
received NDSL awards are facing added
delays.
Senate Dates
The 1972-73 University Senate is be-
ginning its year with a meeting and picnic
today at the Mohawk Campus. Official
meeting dates for the year are Sept. 5,
Oct. 2, Nov. 6, Dec. 4, Jan. 22, Feb. 5,
Mar. 5, Apr. 2, and May 7.
Meetings of the Executive Commit-
tee are slated for Sept. 20, Oct. 25, Nov.
22, Jan. 10, Jan. 24, Feb. 21, Mar. 21,
and Apr. 25.
The annual report of the 1971-72
Senate will be distributed shortly to
deans and department chairmen. Copies
will be placed on reserve in the Library.
Anyone wishing to obtain a copy of the
report should contact the Senate Office,
AD 301, 7-4622.
Art Show Opens
Three new exhibitions will open
today at the Art Gallery.
A selection of prints, drawings, and
paintings from the SUNYA collection will
be shown on the gallery’s second floor.
The exhibition includes an acrylic
painting by Carroll Cloar, and prints by
Karel Appel, Leonard Baskin, Ellsworth
Kelly, and Robert Raushenberg.
Occupying the main floor of the gal-
lery will be sketches by Sara Skolnik and
drawings and sculpture by Larry Kogan.
Thirty sketches by Ms. Skolnik have been
selected from six notebooks of sketches
executed during her 1971 summer in
Africa. Larry Kagan, a 1970 graduate of
SUNYA, has returned with art work he
did while in Israel the past two years.
All three exhibitions may be seen
Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m., Saturday and Sunday through Sept.
20.
must CAMPUS CLIPBOARD
ALL UNIVERSITY EVENTS
MONDAY COFFEE HOUSE MEETING - 8 pm to 11 pm - Cafeteria (Campus Center)
August 28 SIMS MEETING - 8 pm to 10:30 pm - HU 354
TUESDAY I.F.C. MEETING - 8 pm - CC 373
August 29 SIMS MEETING - 8 pm to 10:30 pm - HU 354
STB FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 7
WEDNESDAY OUTING CLUB MEETING - 7:30 pm to 8:30 pm - CC 315
August 30 STB FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 7
THURSDAY STB FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 7
August 31 MIDDLE EARTH - Training Session - 7 to 11 pm - Assembly Hall (Campus Center)
ASP INTEREST MEETING - 7 to 11 pm - CC 315
FRIDAY TOWER EAST CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 9:30 pm - LC 7 - Admission $.50 with State Quad
September card, $1.00 without.
SUNYA CINEMA FILM - 7:30 and 9:30 pm - LC 18
INTERNATIONAL FILM GROUP FILM - 7:15 pm and 9:15 pm - LC 25
SABBATH SERVICE 7 pm to 10 pm - CC Formal Gardens weather permitting - If rain - CC 315
SATURDAY SUNYA CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 9:30 pm - LC 18
September 2 STUDENT ASSOCIATION WORKSHOP - 9 am to 5 pm - Mohawk Long House
TOWER EAST CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 9:30 pm - LC 7 - Admission $.50 with State Quad
card, $1.00 without.
SUNDAY JEWISH STUDENTS COALITION DINNER - 6 pm to 10 pm - Ballroom (Campus Center)
September 3
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
MOHAWK CAMPUS HOURS - 12 noon to 8 pm Daily
Canoeing ($.75/hour/craft), Swimming Pool ($.50 admission, all day; $.25 admission, 6:30 pm
to 8 Ne Snack Bar (12 noon to 6 pm). Information and Reservations - 457-7600
Mohawk Activities Center - 371-6941
CAMPUS CENTER HOURS - FALL SEMESTER
SUNDAY MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
Building Hours 12 Noon- 7:30 am- 7:30 am- 8:00 am-
and Information Desk 12 Mid. 12:00 Mid. 1:00 am 1:00 am
23
Barbershop - M - F, 8:30 am - 5 pm; Closed Sat. and Sun.
Billiards - M- Th, 10 am -11 pm; Fri., 10 am - 12 Mid.; Sat, 10 am - 12 Mid., Sunday, 1 pm - 11 pm
Bowling - M- Th, 12 N - 11 pm; Fri., 12 N - 12 Mid.; Sat., 10 am - 12 Mid.; Sun., 1 pm - 11 pm
Cafeteria - M - Th, 7:30 am - 2 pm and 5 pm - 6:30 pm; Fri., 7:30 am - 2 pm; Closed Saturday & Sunday
Check Cashing - M - F, 9 am - 3:30 pm; Sat., 10 am - 1 pm, Closed Sunday
Health Insurance - M - F, 9 am - 3 pm; Closed Saturday and Sunday
Patroon Room - M - F, 11:30 am - 2 pm; Closed Saturday and Sunday (Dinner Schedule to be Announced)
Rathskeller - M - Th, 7 pm - 11:30 pm; Fri., 7 pm - 12:30 am; Sat., 2 pm - 12:30 am; Sun., 7 - 11:30 pm
Snack Bar - M- Th, 10 am - 11:30 pm; Fri., 10 am - 12:30 am; Sat., 9 am - 12:30 am; Sun., 2 - 11:30 pm
Bookstore - Mon., 8 am - 8 pm; Tues. - Fri., 8 am - 5 pm; Sat., 9 am - 1 pm; Closed Sunday. (Additional
shopping hours will be maintained early in the Semester to accommodate textbook
acquisitions).
I.D. CARDS FOR NEW STUDENTS AND OTHERS REQUIRING THEM may be picked up at the CC Information Desk.
STUDENT TAX CARDS MAY BE PICKED UP between 9 am - 5 pm, Monday through Friday at Student Association
Office - CC 346.
Campus Clipboard is prepared by the Student Activities Office. Items to be included
should be submitted in writing to CC 137 by the Tuesday preceding publication date.
For further information about items listed in the Clipboard, call 7-6923.
Summer Sessions Filled
With Classes,
According to figures released by Paul
A. Saimond, interim director of summer
sessions, there were approximately 5,000
students registered for the current ses-
Of that number some 3,000 were grad-
uate students or students in general
studies who hold bachelor’s degrees.
Within the estimated 2,000 enrolled
undergraduates, 1,143 were upper divi-
sion students. Two hundred twenty-seven
were students in the College of General
Studies, and 467 were admitted as special
students from other colleges. Of the lat-
ter, most are persons with homes in the
area who wanted to accelerate their pro-
grams by attending summer classes here.
They represented about 9 to 10 per cent
of the student enrollment and about 25
per cent of the undergraduate enrollment.
Enrollment was down about 10 per cent
over last year’s total.
Despite the reduction of summer
courses by about 100 and faculty by 50,
in contrast with last year, the total sum-
mer faculty numbered about 270 and
there were about 600 courses offered.
Said Director Saimond, “I feel that we
have maintained a quality program that is
educationally viable even though we did
experience fiscal setbacks in our budget
for the summer.”
There was additional registration in
special programs such as the Adult Basic
Education Program. It was the only one
of its kind being federally funded any-
where in the United States this year.
Twenty-eight states, Puerto Rico, and the
Virgin Islands were represented among
those registered for credit in the institute.
Several professionals in the field of
opera were on hand for the Opera Work-
shop held in collaboration with the Lake
George Opera Festival and the Saratoga
Performing Arts Center. The workshop
was under the direction of John Moriarty,
conductor of the Lake George festival
and a member of the faculty at the New
England Conservatory of Music. The stage
director of the New York City Opera,
Patrick Bakman, and the assistant con-
ductor of the Metropolitan Opera, George
Posell, were on the faculty.
Course work was done off-campus as
well as on during the summer. Archaeol-
ogy students worked at digs in the
Hudson Valley, coastal Maine, and high-
land Guatemala. Science students com-
pleted a variety of courses in environmen-
tal biology at the Cranberry Lake Biologi-
cal Station in the Adirondacks.
Conferences
Two programs were conducted in
England, One focused on British theater,
the other studied innovations in British
education. Foreign language study took
place in nine countries.
In addition to courses, a variety of
non-credit conferences, seminars, work-
shops, and institutes were held through-
out the summer.
The Bookstore has expanded its
greeting card selection and moved that
phase of its operation into the area for-
merly occupied by the barber shop.
Bookstore Manager Arnold Colon reports
that the wall which separated the barber
shop and the defunct beauty shop has
been relocated to form two nearly-equal
rooms. The barber shop occupies the area
where the beauty shop was — ie., the
Allen Center
Holds Opening
Fifty-nine freshmen are in the first
class of the James E. Allen, Jr., Collegiate
Center which will hold its opening pro-
gram this morning in the lower lounge of
Brubacher. Among the speakers at the
first meeting of faculty and students
together will be President Benezet.
“Bright, articulate, and concerned
about contemporary social issues.” That’s
how Seth W. Spellman, dean, describes
the students selected for the center’s new
time-shortened baccalaureate program.
Members of the faculty, most of
whom will divide their time between the
center and other SUNYA duties, have
been announced. Dean Spellman com-
mented, “We think they are among the
best in the university.”
They include Guy Allaud, Richard
Hornblower, Benton Jamison, Melvin
Katz, Robert Morris, Ricardo Nirenberg,
Malcolm Smiley, and John Stutz, mathe-
matics; Sheila Berger and James
Cochrane, English; Thomas Atkinson and
Robert Nurnberger, science; Morris
Berger, foundations of education; Donald
Birn and Melvin Urofsky, history;
Thomas Boehm, science education.
Also, Morris Eson, human develop-
ment; Alfred Finkelstein, physical chem-
istry; James Flynn, biological sciences;
Paul Juncker, geography; William Krause,
education; David Novak, economics; and
Judith Place, library.
Search Committees Underway
Search committees have been formed
by Vice President for Academic Affairs
Phillip Sirotkin to find a dean of the
School of Business and a dean of the Col-
lege of General Studies.
Serving on the School of Business
committee are Donald Axelrod, public
administration; William Diamond, Ronald
Forbes, Frank Kolmin, and Ronald
Minch, of the School of Business;
Stephen Gregg and Arthur Morning,
Tower Tribune
Published weekly when classes are in ses-
sion by the Community Relations Office
as a service to the university community:
carries news of campus-wide interest for
and about students, faculty, and staff.
Submit items in writing one week in
advance to AD 235 or call 7-4901. Name
and address must be included. Items for
“Campus Exchange” should be sub-
mitted to AD 262. All material is subject
to editing. The Tribune is printed on
undergraduate students; Timothy
Kidman, graduate student; Richard
Myren, School of Criminal Justice; and
Louis Salkever, vice president for
research.
Professor Axelrod will convene the
first meeting of the committee in Sep-
tember. The committee’s final report is
expected not later than mid-January.
Asked to serve on the College of
General Studies committee have been
Kendall Birr, history; Donald Bourque,
business; Ann Burns, student; Diva
Daims, English; Justine Davidson, aca-
demic affairs; John Farley, School of
Library and Information Science; Daniel
Ganeles, curriculum and instruction; Alan
Klein, social welfare; Samuel McGee
Russell, biology; and Robert Stierer, man-
agement and planning.
The first committee meeting will be
convened in September, with a final
report expected in January.
‘Round the Campus
The Office of the Registrar has announced that Jate registration and program adjust-
ments for the semester will be held in the U lounge of Colonial Quad today through
Sept. 6 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m... Student Association President Michael Lampert
participated in a series of video-taped dialogues with Chancellor Boyer. The discussions
will be shown on campuses through SUNY. Topics include allocation of new tuition
revenue, student involvement in the decision-making process, and student activity
fees. ..The Faculty Wives Association is planning a blood drive on campus Wednesday,
Sept. 6...Radio station WIRY is providing two scholarships for the next four aca-
demic years for two students attending SUNYA. The Troy-based station also will
provide 100 hours per student per year of on-the-job training. They will be awarded
soon to two students studying in the Department of Educational Communications. . .
The Accreditation Commission of the Council on Social Work Education has informed
Bookstore Expands Operations
With Separate Shop for Cards
western half — and the greeting card shop
is housed in the eastern half, nearest the
Bookstore.
“‘Our greeting card business has
expanded so much that we’ve run out of
space,” Mr. Colon explains. “By moving
it, we not only can expand our selection
of cards, but also free Bookstore space
for other items. We plan to expand pri-
marily in personal and gift items.”
Marta Santiago, a graduate of
SUNYA with a master’s in public admin-
istration, has been named manager of the
gift department. The Bookstore itself has
been rearranged with the objective of
creating greater shopper appeal and ease
of movement.
The American Greeting Card Com-
pany has provided display fixtures and
the interior decoration scheme for the
new shop, which will operate on the same
new schedule as the Bookstore this fall: 8
a.m.-8 p.m., Monday; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Tuesday-Friday; and 9 a.m.-I p.m., Satur-
day.
the School of Social Welfare of its
approval of the accreditation review sub-
mitted by the school. The review is re-
quired of all new schools in the third year
after initial accreditation. . Sports Infor-
mation Director Robert Rice has been
elected secretary-treasurer of the State
Sports Information Directors Associa-
tion. . .A new state law sets penalties for
any person selling dissertations, term
papers, essays, or written reports to
students who would use them to fulfill
educational requirements. ..The new
schedule of library hours reflects an aver-
age weekly increase of slightly more than
10 percent. An automatic telephone
answering device is available around the
clock at 7-8551 which will give library
hours. .. Students Antonio T. Diaz-Royo
and Raul Mayo have been awarded grants
from the U.S, Office of Education to con-
duct research in Puerto Rico. . . Copies of
the new Biblion are available at the
library at no charge for interested faculty
and students. . ...New telephone and
room numbers: Hans A. Pohlsander, HU
332, 7-8432; Mary G. Goggin, HU 349,
7-8444. .. Friday is the deadline for sub-
mitting information to Jeff Rodgers, CC
334, for inclusion of offices, services, cen-
ters, schools, and colleges in the 1972-73
University Directory.
Committee To Obtain Grants
For Improvement of Teaching
A Committee on Grants for the Im-
provement of Undergraduate Instruction
has been formed to help SUNYA faculty
members take advantage of a new State
University-wide program of faculty grants
for improving undergraduate instruction.
Stated objective of the grants is “to
encourage and support research and de-
velopment of instructional techniques
related to the applicant’s personal instruc-
tional responsibilities rather than research
applicable to general problems of instruc-
tion.” Awards will range from $800 to
$2,000 and will be valid for 18 months
following announcement of the grant.
Functions of the local SUNYA com-
mittee will be to stimulate faculty inter-
est in the awards, assist in the develop-
ment of proposals, and forward them to a
Central Awards Committee which will
make the final determination of grant
recipients.
Serving on the committee are Donald
Birn, history; Craig Henrikson, anthropol-
ogy; Richard Kelly, biology; Hedi
McKinley, social welfare; James Powers,
educational psychology; Jonathan
Knight, political science; and John Reilly,
English.
The timetable for the first series of
awards calls for all applications to reach
Positions Available
Information about the following cam-
pus job openings may be obtained from
the Personnel Office, 7-3923.
P-X-5 — Stenographer,School of Business
P-72-108 Instructor,Physics Department
P-72-107 Grants coordinator,
Office for Research
P-72-105 Counseling psychologists (two),
P-72-106 — University Counseling Center
the Central Awards Committee by Oct. |.
Vice President for Academic Affairs
Phillip Sirotkin has asked that the local
committee make its report no later than
Sept. 15. Announcement of the awards
will be made by Jan. 1, 1973.
Grant monies may be used to buy
materials, pay a substitute to release the
faculty member for more time on his pro-
ject, and/or subsidize him during the sum-
mer to work on his project.
In making the final awards, the Cen-
tral Awards Committee has been
instructed to keep in mind that “the ulti-
mate beneficiary of the grants is to be the
student.” Priority will be given to those
grant proposals which show promise of
benefitting the greatest number of stu-
dents.
Campus Exchange
FOR RENT: Room in 6-room apartment
with 3 other girls, own bedroom, on bus-
line, available immediately. Call
482 2208 8 4-bedroom house,
double garage, minutes from SUNYA.
Call 456-3686 evenings...... Small
house in woods, 10 minutes from
SUNYA, suitable for | or 2 persons. Call
456-6443.
FOR SALE: IBM electric typewriter,
office size, $75. 1967 Mercury Cornet, 6
cyl., reliable, inexpensive to run; $350.
Call 438-0946. . 3-bedroom house in
Elsmere, den, finished basement, tree-
shaded lot. Call 439-5460...... 3-bed-
room brick ranch, central air condi-
tioning, campus area. Call Stewart Rubin,
7-1897 or 489-2090. .....MGC, 6 cyl.,
automatic transmission, roll bar, wire
wheels, AM-FM radio, leather seats. Call
765-2346. .....2-bedroom house in
McKownville. Call 438-8001.